Reality Intrudes
Part Eight: Disengage and Recover
[A/N: this chapter beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]
So, this isn't good. In fact, I could go as far as to say it's
bad. Mr Tactical there really knows how to use his cover to its best effect, while Whitey McWhiteface seems to be able to ignore the deleterious effects of a couple of high-velocity nine-mil slugs performing impromptu surgery on his vital organs. Meanwhile, they're both armed and not at all reluctant about making use of said armament in my direction.
And while the neo-Nazi parody poster child (why yes, I
do think it's ridiculously on the nose for a guy who's
literally white all over to be a member of a white-supremacy group) is only middling effective with his artillery, his buddy has come unsettlingly close a few times. Not sure where this guy got that sort of training, but he's good.
Real good.
It's true that all the skill in the world won't save your life when an Operative decides to insert a lead jellybean where it'll do (me) the most good. But I'm having a lot of trouble delivering said jellybeans of doom in an accurate and timely manner. This is partly because the Whitemeister is pretty damn good at running interference for his buddy, and partly because this asshole seems to be getting
more accurate as the firefight goes on. And for some reason, I'm getting
less accurate, which is bullshit of the most profane order.
I pop the cardboard cutout in the face with the last round in my pistol, then reload on the fly while I somersault out through the door. A string of holes punch their way through the wall, missing me by rather less than a comfortable margin; the long-coat is now a little more ventilated than it was when I bought it. I return fire, trying to match trajectories, but I hear no sound of a falling body. When I land and roll, I nearly muff it, which seals the deal in my mind.
Something hinky is going on in Brockton Bay.
Tall-pale-and-Nazi is around the corner first, not even a bloodstain to show where I nailed him above the right eye-socket. He's got two forty-fours up and firing like ammo just went on sale. If I'd paused for even a few seconds, I would've been in a killbox, but I've been doing this shit longer than that. I've already anticipated this move, and I'm diving through another doorway as his fire nips and chops at my heels.
My trailing gun fires off two shots; one to the throat and one to the shoulder. Which is problematic, because I intended for two headshots right then. What in the name of Trinity is going on here?
Normally, pulling out your phone and dialling the Operator during a firefight is a sign that you're royally screwed and have zero other options. I'm anticipating this scenario, and I'm working to forestall it. In other words, it's better to call your Operator
before you need their help, not
after their help would've been useful.
Loki, of course, is his usual suave and helpful self.
"Hey, Moo-moo. Is it just me, or are you having trouble with just two bluepills in there? Losing a step, are we?"
"Something's fucking with me," I say, nailing the paperboy (hah! I kill me) through both lungs as he shows in the doorway of the room I've ended up in. He crumples to the ground yet
again, but an instinct has me diving to the side as a blitzkrieg of shots (pun intended) comes through the wall just short of the door.
They nearly get me, too. The asshole comes
that close. I've got to seriously work to avoid the multiple trails of sonic disturbance. I fire back as I launch myself at the doorway; if I can get just one good shot in on him, I can then concentrate on ending Mr Mayonnaise permanently. Maybe I can arrange something with wet concrete.
"Well, shit. Looks like you aren't malingering this one time." Loki sounds honestly surprised. I personally don't care; I just want him to fix whatever's going on.
"Your combat stats are going down by the second."
By the time he's said this, I've come out through the doorway, but Captain Nazi has anticipated me and ducked behind a doorframe, leaving his buddy on the floor at my feet. I fire another shot into the guy as he begins to stir, and bolt farther down the corridor.
I find myself back in the common room, gunsmoke rasping in my throat, as I try to figure out whether to get Taylor Hebert's skinny ass out of there or try to finish these assholes first. Because they've surely got a good look at her face by now, and even if I took her away from here before jacking out, they'd hunt her down and kill her. But try as I might, I
just can't get a bead on that guy. He's too damn good. And while I should be better than him, I'm
not.
"Well, fix it," I rasp.
"On it." There's a click over the line, and then I feel the flood of incoming muscle memory. It's rough, raw and more than a little painful; Loki's speed-loading my skills back into me at a way faster rate than normal. Right now, it's just what I need.
So was the breather. I drop the pistol and unsling one of my two shotguns from where it's been flopping around on my back all this time. The guys have clearly had time to confer, because they come into the room from two different directions. Whitebread is pulling his usual stunt of coming in fast and dangerous, leading with his forty-fours. I'm supposed to try to pop him—
again—while Special Ops Man hits me from the side.
Only, I just changed the script. Outside the Matrix, I'm pretty damn dangerous. Inside it, up against bluepills, I'm insanely capable. In Earth Bet's frayed and denatured version of reality, I'm basically a god of war. And it's about time I reminded these assholes of that.
I lean into my Matrix capabilities. The shotgun in my hands is a virtual-reality construct; to anyone living in here, it's a
thing, unchangeable. To me … it's a weapon of mass destruction.
I run halfway up the wall to escape Mr White's gunfire, then do a backflip. While I'm in the air, I sight on his head and fire. Blood and brains spray out sideways from the divot my slug just put in his skull. He's dead, right there, but before he has a chance to begin falling, I rack the action and fire again.
Normally, if a pump action shotgun is worked past a certain speed, forcing the mechanism beyond its normal limits, it will be damaged. It might even break. I choose not to let it break, as I fire a second time, then rack it again. And fire. And again, and again.
I'm still in midair, twisting around to land while firing the shotgun over and over, when the second asshole enters the room. To me, he's moving at a snail's pace, bringing his gun up to bear on me. I keep firing, racking the slide, firing again. The shotgun's internal mechanisms are starting to glow with a dull heat. I don't care.
Something about the whiteface guy is letting him get up each time I kill him. I don't have the deep sense of the Matrix that the One had, but I get my feelings from time to time. And right now my instincts are yelling at me to remove this guy's head. Lacking a machete, or even a pocket knife, I'm going with the next best option.
My skills are
back, baby. Every shot hits, and every hit counts. By the time the magazine is empty, I've hammered twelve rounds downrange, a mix of slugs and heavy buckshot. Between them, they've taken this mook's head apart like a watermelon. There's not much above the neck; the wall behind him, on the other hand, could win a modern art contest. By my estimation, it's taken me about two and a half seconds to empty the shotgun at him.
His body hits the floor, just about the time I drop the shotgun and unsling the other one. The ratty carpet begins to smoulder, but I'm more interested in expressing my extreme displeasure with his buddy. Especially since I think I've figured out
his cute little trick.
Skill stealing. I mean, how low can you go?
He goes for cover, of course, even though he probably hasn't figured out yet that his buddy's down for the count. But the difference now is that I'm not trying to hang back and snipe him. I close, fast, and kick the chair he's hiding behind. The chair flies back and hits the wall, and so does he. He tries to roll to one side and tag me, but whatever bullshit he's already pulled is officially
over.
The instant his head comes into view, I put a slug through it.
I'm not here to take prisoners, and this guy was
way more trouble than he's worth.
Keeping one ear out for incoming sirens, or any kind of car engines at all, I go back to clearing the house. The basement door is locked; that's cute. I don't even bother with the shotgun. One kick later—and a step back to make sure I don't get popped by some asshole who decided to play possum—the door's open.
I pause for a moment, listening.
Feeling the air.
There's nobody downstairs. I head down, shotgun at the ready anyway.
<><>
Three minutes later, I hurdle the back fence and start away at a steady jog, keeping to the shadows. Over my left shoulder is a duffel full of guns and ammunition, with money stuffed in here and there to fill the gaps. While "guns … lots of guns" may not be our
official motto, it should be. Martial arts are all well and good, but there's nothing that can reach out and say hi to some asshole who desperately needs it like a high-powered firearm.
I detour to grab my other bag from where I stashed it, then I jog away into the gathering evening as smoke begins to curl into the air from the building I've just left. Normally by this time, I'd be on the lookout for a very special phone box, where I could jack out and disappear from the Matrix until it came time to jump back in again. Of course, I'd also probably be on the run from Agents at this point as well.
But this body I'm using isn't going to dissolve into the electronic ether the moment I disconnect. Taylor Hebert has a life of her own, and she deserves a chance to stay alive once I step out and let her take control again. So it's on me to make sure I leave her someplace safe. It'll also be a great idea for me to
not leave her to face the consequences of what I've been doing since I left the school.
Unfortunately for the both of us, I've got
no idea how to cover for everything I've done with her since I stepped out of that locker. The most I can do is run damage control.
On the other hand, her memory tells me that her dad has been kind of passive since his wife died. While this isn't much, it's definitely something I can work with.
But first, I have to stash my ill-gotten gains somewhere. Having someone confiscate them, or just plain steal them, would irritate the absolute living
fuck out of me. Also, I've got to get rid of the smell of gunsmoke. That stuff clings to
everything.
<><>
Danny Hebert
For what must have been the fifteenth time, Danny got up and went to the front door. He opened it and looked out, hoping against hope to see Taylor trudging up the front path. He didn't know what he was going to do first; yell at her or hug her. Maybe both.
When he'd been contacted by the police, he hadn't known what was going on. It turned out they were somewhat in the dark as well. Taylor had clearly been shut in her locker, which was equally clearly full of some pretty vile stuff, by a person or persons unknown. Blackwell was covering her ass faster than a fat kid spreading gravy over fried chicken, but it was obvious to everyone with half a brain that Winslow had fallen down on the job
hard.
As for 'person or persons unknown', that was a not so polite fiction that Danny was calling bullshit on as well. The fact that after forcing the door off the locker she'd been shut in—which only underlined the crappy state of the lockers in Winslow—Taylor had made a beeline to Emma's class and dragged her out by the ear said
something to Danny. What it actually meant, he wasn't sure, but the way Emma was complaining loudly (and nasally) about losing her clothing to Taylor, while Alan wasn't saying a goddamn word, indicated that shit was going on behind the scenes.
And then there was the other guy, the one with the immaculate suit and the neat beard. Danny wasn't entirely certain when this one had shown up at Winslow, but the man had pulled him into an empty classroom and asked a whole series of pointed questions which amounted to, "is your daughter a parahuman?"
When he'd told the guy that he was damn sure Taylor
wasn't a cape, the man had nodded as if unsurprised and handed him a business card. "I'm with the PRT," he'd said. "Call this number if she starts exhibiting odd capabilities. We can help her."
Danny knew the PRT hotline number; it featured among the just-in-case numbers on his office phone. The number on the card wasn't it. Whoever the guy was, he was
not some office drone, sent to Winslow as part of standard procedure. Something was definitely going on here, and Danny disliked having the wool pulled over his eyes as much as anyone else did. He'd put the card away and made a bland almost-promise to do just that.
Whether the guy actually worked for the PRT or someone else pretending to be them, he wasn't certain. He intended to keep his options open until after he spoke with Taylor and got her side of things. Of course, this required Taylor to
come home at some point.
There was nobody on the front path. The street was as quiet and empty as it had been the previous fourteen times he'd checked. Defeated, he closed the door again and turned to go back into the living room—
"Hi, Dad." Taylor stood there behind him in the entrance hall. "Sorry about—oof!"
"Taylor!" Danny hugged her tightly, smelling cheap soap on her hair as he did so. "Where the hell have you
been? I've been worried sick! Nobody's seen you since—" He trailed off.
Since the school was remarkably undescriptive.
Since the locker would have rubbed her face in what happened. "—since this morning."
She waited until he let her go, then nodded. "I know. I didn't want anyone seeing me. Did you see the locker?"
"Yeah, I saw it." His fists clenched all over again. "Someone's head is going to fucking
roll for that."
"Don't bother." She shook her head. "They closed ranks, yeah? Nobody saw nothing, let's just sweep this under the carpet?"
"Kind of, yeah." He led the way into the living room, then appraised her appearance and attitude. She was honestly looking better than he would've expected. Not nearly as distressed as he would've been in the same situation. "Emma's pissed at you, but Alan's playing it close to the chest. What happened there? What does she have to do with it?"
From the look on her face, he knew the truth. He just didn't want to think about it. Emma had been best friends with her
forever.
"You know exactly what's going on, Dad." She sat down on the sofa. "It was Emma and some of her friends. They've been pulling this shit on me since I started at Winslow. But you'll never get her to admit it. And her father's a lawyer, so there's that."
She was being remarkably pragmatic about the whole thing. Far more than he was, he had to admit. Also, extremely impersonal about the Barneses, but that was probably a defence mechanism.
"So what happened?" he asked. "I've heard everyone else's side but yours."
Sitting on the sofa, she related her experiences simply and concisely. Danny hadn't heard about the girl Sophia being involved before; that added another layer to the mystery. She was a little vague about where she'd gone once she left the school, and where she'd dumped the clothing she'd stolen from Emma and Sophia, but Danny didn't care about that.
Where she'd gotten what she was wearing right then was easy to figure out; the Lord Street Market stayed open late on weekdays. The T-shirt, jeans and sneakers she had on weren't exactly haute coture, but they did the job.
"So, am I in trouble?" she asked once she was done.
Danny shook his head. "There's no arrest warrants out for you. The police
would like to speak to you on the matter, but the fact of the locker muddies the waters considerably. Also …" He paused, not sure how to go on.
"Someone else wants to talk to me?" She raised her eyebrows. "Oh. The PRT. Well, I wasn't exactly subtle, I guess."
"What's that supposed to mean?" If he hadn't been looking right at Taylor, he would've thought she was a different person. More direct, more assured. And most of all, she didn't have an apologetic bone in her body, whereas the Taylor he knew walked around hunched in as though asking the world for permission to exist.
She got up then and checked the street with a twitch of the curtain. Then she picked up the remote and turned on the news. "What I
mean," she said once the speakers were filling the room with sound, "is that there are things they're not telling you. For instance, that girl Sophia I kicked the shit out of? She's the Ward called Shadow Stalker. And I'd bet dollars to doughnuts that her higher-ups don't know about her little extracurricular activities. Which is why they've passed the word to keep this as much on the down-low as possible."
Danny stared at her. "A Ward," he said. "You were shut in your locker by a Ward."
"Yeah," she said lightly. "Turns out that getting a shitload of power and being put in authority over people doesn't automatically make someone trustworthy. Shocker, hey?"
"But how can you be so
calm about it?" he demanded. "This is
Emma we're talking about! Your friend!"
"I've had a lot of time to think about it. And she's no friend of mine. So, not to change the subject, but I'm gonna change the subject." She tapped her ear. "Did anyone wearing a suit and sunglasses, little coiled-wire earpiece, maybe a little vague about exactly who they're working for, ask you about me? Push for a few details?"
Danny thought back to the guy with the beard. "Yeah," he said slowly. "Someone did that. He said he was from the PRT." He pulled the card out of his pocket. "He gave me this."
"Thanks." She accepted the card from him and examined it. "What did he say, exactly?"
"Uhh …" Danny concentrated. "He asked me a bunch of questions about anything weird you might've done recently. I think he thought you were a cape. And he said to call that number if you showed up with powers."
Taylor snorted. "What, like flying around wearing brightly-coloured tights? No, thanks. Not for me. I'm exactly the same person I was this morning before all this shit started."
Danny had his doubts. Between the implications of the information he'd gathered at Winslow and Taylor's current attitude, it seemed to him that she'd had a massive confidence boost since he'd last seen her. Beating up the people who'd shoved her in the locker then spending the day wandering around the city had apparently done her the world of good.
Or maybe … a horrible potential crept into his mind.
What if she's been Mastered? That would also cause a distinct personality shift. "I don't know," he said out loud. "Your mother's nickname for you would be fairly apt, in that case."
She hesitated for half a second, and his heart sank. Then she looked at him oddly. "What, 'little owl'? I'm pretty sure that's about my glasses, not being able to fly."
"Yeah, yeah, I know. It was a pretty poor joke." He gestured toward the kitchen. "Hungry? I made lasagne."
If she heard the unspoken
while I was waiting for you to come home, she didn't respond to it. "Cool, thanks, Dad. I
am kinda famished."
As she headed for the kitchen, he followed along. She had passed his impromptu test, but he still felt slightly uneasy and he didn't know why.
<><>
Taylor
"Let me out! Let me
out!"
Taylor thrashed, trying to free herself from the four metal walls and the all-pervading stench. It was useless, and despair welled deep in her soul. She was trapped and—
Everything changed. The stink was gone, replaced with the warm, familiar smell of freshly-laundered sheets. Hard metal and squelching horror vanished in favour of a cocoon of sheets and blankets, wrapped comfortably around her body.
She stopped struggling. Her cry for help died in her throat. Taking a deep breath, she inhaled the scents of her bedroom. Slowly, carefully, not wanting the reprieve to be an illusion, she extricated herself from the soft enclosure and sat up in bed.
It was night-time. Her alarm clock told her so, and the view out the window agreed with it. She was wearing pyjamas, not ordinary clothing. And she was in her room, not her locker.
What's going on here? Did I just have a horribly detailed nightmare?
That was about the time she noticed the sheet of paper clenched in her fist. Carefully, she spread it out it then turned on her reading-lamp and fumbled for her glasses. Settling back into bed, she began to read the spidery writing.
Hi, Taylor.
I've got good news and bad news for you.
Bad news: yes, it all happened. Fortunately, I got you out of the locker.
I also kicked the shit out of Emma and Sophia, so you're welcome for that too.
Now for the other bad news.
I'm currently Mastering you, or I will be once I get some shuteye. This is not just a for-kicks thing for me. I have a job to do, and you're the only one who can help me with it.
What's the job, you may ask?
Saving everyone on Earth Bet. It's a big job, but I doubt anyone else is up to doing it.
Okay, time for the good news. I'm really, really good at my job. Trust me, you're in the best possible hands when I'm running your body. Also, when I'm in charge of you, you're basically superhuman. I know this because I beat two of your homegrown capes just tonight. Keep an eye on the news for Victor and Alabaster. If you don't see them, it's because we (you and me) put them down like the rabid dogs they were.
Also good news: it's possible to save the world. Or rather, the people in it. The world itself? A bit of a shithole, if you ask me. But we can do this. I've got faith in us. And I've done this before.
Now for the downside. I'm gonna be borrowing your body occasionally to go do world-saving stuff. You'll be switched off for the duration. There will be no perceived passage of time for you. I will do my best to ensure you come back in safe locations, where nobody will query you for what's been going on. Also, I'll figure out some way of keeping you in the loop as to what we've been doing while you were out.
Oh and by the way, the PRT suspects us of being a cape. Technically that may be true, but we don't want their attention. We've got stuff to do that they might not appreciate.
So, breakdown. Your dad knows you busted out of the locker and kicked shit out of Emma and Sophia in the bathroom, and stole Emma's blouse and boots and Sophia's jeans. He also knows that Sophia is Shadow Stalker, of the Wards.
Yeah, so that's a thing. It's also one of the reasons we can't let the PRT get its hooks into us. I wouldn't have trusted them as far as I could spit them even before I found out that little secret.
Your dad does not know that I'm working to save the world, or that I've dealt with two Empire Eighty-Eight capes (and a number of mooks) already. That's between you and me.
I'll do my best to keep both you and him safe. If everything goes to shit, I'll move heaven and earth to get you both to a safe place. That's my promise to you.
In the meantime, each time you have a blackout, just be aware that it's for a good cause.
Sorry for any inconvenience,
Morrigan
PS: Feel free to ask any questions. I'll do my best to answer them the next time around.
PPS: Destroy this letter. You absolutely do not want anyone else reading it.
Taylor read it through. Then she read it through again. Eventually, she got up and left her room. Finding her way down the corridor to the bathroom in the dark was second nature to her; she'd been doing it all her life. Carefully, she tore the letter to shreds and dropped them into the toilet, then flushed it clear. Then she returned to her bed, turned out the light and lay there staring at the ceiling in the dark.
Sleep was a long time coming.
End of Part Eight