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Wyvern - Worm AU fanfic

Part Twenty-Seven: Pitch, Interrupted
Wyvern

Part Twenty-Seven: Pitch, Interrupted

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



Geonchugga

There were many flaws inherent in the powered armour Ha-joon had constructed for the troops, but those mainly had to do with all the functions he'd had to leave off to make them simple and easy to pilot. Even though he knew what he was doing and why, each powered suit felt unfinished as he handed it over to its user. The suit he was going to wear, which he'd completed already, had all the bells and whistles.

Standing in front of his men, each one wearing the power armour and carrying a shotgun—in this situation, firepower was more desirable than accuracy—he felt a swell of pride in them. Clearing his throat, he activated the speakers in the suit and addressed them.

"Attention, my warriors of the Azn Bad Boys. Today is an important day. This is something you've never done before." He paused, then added lightly. "I know this, because it's definitely something I've never done before."

There was laughter, and scattered applause.

Emboldened, he went on. "The forces standing against us are formidable. There is the PRT, there is the Protectorate, and there is Wyvern. But they are as nothing to our determination to free great Inago! This morning, he was sitting in a prison cell! This evening, he will dine among us, and take his place once more as our undisputed leader!"

The laughter became cheers, and his men held their fists high. A couple, in their enthusiasm, performed standing backflips. He waited for the echoes of metal crashing against concrete to die away before he spoke again.

"Now, you all have your instructions. You have been divided into four strike groups. Group A will enter the Weymouth Mall, take people hostage, and start robbing stores. Break many things, but don't hurt anyone who isn't being stupid. Group B will do the same thing at the Augustus Country Club. Group C will do the same at the Brockton Bay Central Bank. And I will lead Group D into the PRT building and free great Inago."

He had already appointed the steadiest of Inago's senior men to lead the other strike groups. The last thing he wanted was a kill order for causing his men and women to run rampant and murder dozens; the less pain caused by the freeing of Inago, the less likely that the PRT and Protectorate would mobilise against the ABB in the aftermath. At the end of the day, the fickle hand of fate willing, everything would be back to normal.

And he would be under Inago's orders again, back in the rank and file.

Why didn't that comfort him as much as it once would have?

<><>​

Wyvern

I glanced from side to side; Sarah and Carol both gave me encouraging nods. "Okay, I'll hear your pitch." I held up my finger for a moment. "But before we get properly started, I think we're also going to need to record this, just so we're all on the same page about who agreed to what."

"Absolutely," agreed Hero. "My armour has a recording function. I can distribute copies afterward, as needed." He beamed at us all, clearly pleased at being able to make the offer.

Carol cleared her throat. "Not to disparage you or your integrity, but I will be making an independent recording. In addition, if we can all sit down, it will make this feel less rushed. The last thing I want is people leaving this meeting thinking they weren't given a fair shake in the matter." The critical gaze she levelled at Chief Director Costa-Brown clearly indicated whom she thought would be most likely to complain.

"I think that's a great idea." Legend led the way to the lounge and sat down in one of the armchairs. "Particularly the independent recording. Who knows what might happen to the original, especially if it wasn't to the liking of people in power?"

"Now, now." Hero's tone was only mildly censorious. "We all know that politicians are not immune to corruption, but let's not tar everyone here with the Washington brush, okay? I trust Rebecca to do the right thing, here."

"Sure." Legend gave his old friend and ex-teammate a smile that was belied by the content of his words. "Anyone can be trustworthy when they know they're being watched. It's what they do behind closed doors that worries me."

The Chief Director sat down, her expression as unconcerned as though she were relaxing in her own home. "Legend, I know we've had our differences in the past, but many of the issues that caused you to leave in the first place have since been addressed."

"Really?" Legend gestured toward the rest of us, raising an eyebrow. "Care to explain to our hosts exactly what those issues were, and how you addressed them?"

That caused Carol and Sarah to share a startled glance as they sat down, leaving a space for me on the sofa. I had no way of unpacking either their shared look or the meaning of Legend's question, but I got the distinct impression that there was a lot encoded into the latter that the Chief Director didn't want seeing the light of day. Even Hero's genial demeanour slipped a little at the words.

"I believe this is neither the time nor the place to air our dirty laundry." I had to hand it to the Chief Director; she had her poker face down pat. Without Hero's slip of expression, I might not have considered Legend's question to be particularly worrisome to them. Now, I was getting more and more curious as to exactly what this 'dirty laundry' entailed.

"Well, the phrasing is certainly accurate." Legend left it at that, though, and didn't push any harder. "I'm thinking I'll leave things as they are. It's amazing how liberating it is to be a free agent. I'm able to go places, ask questions, and get answers that nobody on your side of the fence has access to."

"Well, not nobody." Hero sounded just a little irritated at Legend's throwaway tone.

Legend grinned lazily at him. "You'd be surprised. If you start from the premise that you know everything, then by definition, you don't know what you don't know."

Sarah looked from Legend to Hero and back again. "I'm beginning to think this discussion isn't about Wyvern at all. If you can't be civil with each other, then I'm going to have to ask one or more of you to leave."

"I second that," cut in Carol before anyone else could speak. "You're all here on Wyvern's behalf, or at least you say you are. If you wish to prove it, kindly cease taking cheap shots at one another and apply yourselves to the matter at hand."

Legend lost his smile. "You're right." Holding up his hand, he made a cut-off gesture. "This isn't the time or the place. I apologise for my part in our little spat."

"As do I." The Chief Director afforded me a small nod. "So, Wyvern, what would you like out of a partnership arrangement?"

I paused, not totally sure what to say next. Legend cleared his throat; when I glanced at him, he shook his head fractionally and made a gesture I couldn't figure out.

"If I may?" asked Carol. The Chief Director's lips tightened fractionally. She didn't want Carol talking, which meant I did.

I spread my hands. "Sure, go ahead." I knew damn well she'd be acting in my best interests, which (if Legend were to be believed) wasn't necessarily the case for the Chief Director.

Funnily enough, despite Legend's evident bias against the PRT and Protectorate in general and the Chief Director in particular, I did indeed believe him. He stood to get nothing out of this, and had once been in a position to know exactly what both government organisations were willing to do in order to achieve their goals. There was likely no way in hell I'd actually learn most of what he knew about that, but right now it was enough that he was in my corner.

"I appreciate you coming this far." Carol's tone was formally polite. "However, I believe it would be only fair if you first told Wyvern what you were willing to offer for such an agreement. That way, we can decide exactly how serious you're being."

Ahh. That hadn't even occurred to me. While I didn't think they'd necessarily shoot down everything I asked for as being 'too much' and thus deliberately frame me as being greedy, it was definitely a valid negotiating tactic. This way, they'd have to decide how much to offer, and we'd have the leeway to critique their suggestions. ('We' in this case being Carol and Sarah; I was very much the spectator in all this.)

The Chief Director's expression tightened a fraction, and Hero didn't look too thrilled either. I was getting the strong impression he hadn't come along to screw me out of any concessions, but neither did he intend to just roll over and hand me the keys to the PRT. That said, he'd clearly spotted the trap inherent in Carol's counter-offer.

"Very well." I had to give the Chief Director kudos for grace under fire. Her every tell stated that she was totally in control of the situation. Unfortunately, she'd already violated one of the fundamental rules of negotiation (as told to me by Carol) already—never let the opposition know how badly you need to close the deal—and so she was very much on the back foot for this. "We are prepared to offer an ongoing stipend for you to be on-call for other S-class threats, and of course Endbringers."

Carol cleared her throat. "And?"

The Chief Director looked at me. I looked straight back; as far as I was concerned, Carol was running the show.

She drew in air through her nostrils, then let it out again. I fancied I could hear her grinding her teeth. "And danger pay for each such battle that you show up to."

Sarah raised two fingers a little and glanced at Carol. Her sister nodded, so she turned to the Chief Director. "Plus a bonus if she actually ends the threat while she's there, if there isn't already a cash reward for killing it."

That put a slight damper on the conversation. I knew how powerful the wyvern could get, and even I couldn't imagine killing an Endbringer.

A few seconds passed, then the Chief Director nodded curtly. "Agreed. Was that it?"

"Hardly." Carol was in full hard-charging lawyer mode now. "Wyvern needs to have the option to step down from her on-call status at any time outside an actual S-class situation. If she has a family emergency or even if she just needs to de-stress and wind down, whether she can just drop everything and go shouldn't be at the whim of some PRT bean-counter." She raised an eyebrow. "Or do you want someone who can literally disintegrate an entire city down to the bedrock getting pissed off and deciding it's not worth playing by the rules anymore?"

I wouldn't want to have been the Chief Director's orthodontist; from the way the muscles were bulging in her jaw, she had to have been clenching her teeth pretty hard. But then she put on a fairly good pretence of relaxing, and nodded. "That can be arranged, yes."

Hesitantly, I put my hand up. "Uh … one other thing."

Every eye in the room turned toward me. Carol's lips twitched, as though she wanted to tell me to shut up, but then she controlled herself. "Yes, Wyvern?" I could feel the sorry-but-no polite rebuttal she had loaded and ready to go, in case I said something detrimental to the protections they were trying to put in place for me.

I took a deep breath, trying to calm my thoughts so that I could make this sound right. "I can fly pretty good, and I can breathe some nasty stuff, but I've never had any formal training in fighting. Hero said something about training me up so I can handle combat and tactics and stuff. Is that still on the table?"

Hero smiled for the first time. "It certainly is. Now that we've seen your capabilities both in a controlled test and in the field, I'd be honoured to help you build your skills in that area."

"Wait one second." Legend held up a finger. "If you're going to do this, Wyvern, I'd like to help train you as well. Just to make sure the job's done properly."

"Really." Hero may have raised an eyebrow; I couldn't tell. "I'm wondering if I should feel offended that you don't trust me."

"I'd actually like that, too," I said hastily. "I mean, Legend is really good what he does. Two teachers, with different styles, would make sure I learned more, right?"

"I agree with Wyvern." Carol looked coolly at Hero. "Having you two work together to train her is a good idea, and I'd also be happier if someone were there who wasn't under pressure to recruit her directly into the Wards or Protectorate."

For a moment, Hero looked like he wanted to protest that he wouldn't be under such pressure, but he never said a word. We all knew it wouldn't be true anyway. The Chief Director might not give him direct orders, but just a glance from her would be pressure enough.

"… fine," he conceded at last, then smiled. It even looked genuine. "It'll be good to be working alongside you again. I have missed that."

Legend returned the smile. "So have I. The issues I had were never with you personally. Just the organisation you work for." His gaze fell upon the Chief Director. "Both of you."

Again, I felt I was missing some kind of subtext, from the way Hero looked uncomfortable and the Chief Director frowned slightly.

"That appears to be settled then," she said. "Do you have any other requirements?"

"Yes." It was Sarah who spoke up again. "The chain of command. Carol mentioned making sure that none of your people could just deny her the option of stepping away from being on call. I'd like to expand on that. There needs to be a clear-cut understanding of who can give her orders in the field. We do not want someone who has zero idea of her real capabilities going on a power trip and getting their eardrums blown out, the way she did with Armsmaster."

Well, that removed all question of whether she'd heard the details of that little incident from Vicky and Amy. From the grin on Legend's face, so had he. Hero tried not to smile as well, but was only moderately successful. The Chief Director had a phenomenal poker face when she chose to use it; now was such a time, which meant to me that she'd gotten chapter and verse.

"Just to set the record straight, I didn't even know I could talk right then, until he irritated me to the point where I yelled at him." I wasn't sure who I was trying to reassure, but I felt it had to be said. "I don't have a sonic attack, exactly. When I'm big, I'm just … loud."

Legend nodded. "Trust me, we got that part. And nobody blames you for the Armsmaster incident. You'd dealt with the villains quite handily, and he kept pushing you while you were still coming down from the adrenaline, and dealing with the fact that you'd grown a few sizes."

"Did you hear about the Shadow Stalker thing?" Hero asked him. "That was quite impressive as well."

Legend tilted his head slightly. "Not all the details. That was the one where Miss Militia was injured, correct? And a school burned down?"

"Shadow Stalker set that fire, not me." I had every right to be defensive, given that I'd already set the school on fire once before that point. "And it didn't burn all the way down. Just … well, part of it." I didn't voice my opinion that not enough had burned down, because that probably wouldn't help my case.

"And then Wyvern sniped Stalker with an explosive fireball from three hundred yards." Hero sounded positively proud of me. "Flash-burned her hair off, third degree burns over a good portion of her body, and a dozen broken bones. She's still not looking her best, and as soon as she recovers, she's going straight back into juvey."

"Just another point here." I hadn't meant to speak up again, but they were specifically talking about stuff I'd done. "She'd just set Winslow on fire, killed a bunch of PRT troopers, and shot Miss Militia in the stomach with a crossbow. If she'd gotten away, Dad and I would've been looking over our shoulders forever. She would've come after us, to shut us up and because she likes hurting people. So, I stopped her from getting away."

Carol cleared her throat. "Just to clarify matters, Wyvern shouldn't even have been there, given that she had a history of being bullied extensively by Stalker and others, but someone arranged for her to be forced to go back, in an attempt to set her up for a fall. We're still not sure who that might be, but the local PRT and Protectorate have all signed off on her actions as being entirely justified." Her look of determination laid down the gauntlet. Try and reverse that, and you'll have a fight on your hands.

"Which they self-evidently were." Hero made the statement plainly. "Whatever else we discuss today, that's not in question. Don't you agree, Chief Director?"

Whether the Chief Director did or not, Carol had made her stand and Hero was on record as agreeing with it. We all knew she could technically override him, but that would send a very definite signal, one I didn't think she wanted to send.

"I do." Her tone was as bland as though the whole thing had been her idea from the beginning. "Her actions were entirely in line with self-defense, defense of others, and apprehending a dangerous suspect. I've read the report submitted by Armsmaster regarding the incident, and his description of her actions is nothing short of glowing."

I hadn't known that last part. Armsmaster had been polite and respectful to me in the aftermath, but that could've just been him being professional. The fact that he'd said nice things about me (or at least she was saying so, which basically came to the same thing) put our interactions into a whole new light.

"And so they should've been." Carol wasn't letting up for an instant. "You do know why he was there, yes?"

"An anonymous tip, yes." The Chief Director's tone gave no indication of her opinion on the matter. "I understand these things happen from time to time on the cape side of things."

"An anonymous tip by someone who specifically wanted to railroad Wyvern into the Protectorate. How often does that happen?" Carol raised her eyebrows interrogatively.

The Chief Director gave the impression of someone smiling while maintaining a deadpan expression. "I honestly couldn't tell you the stats on that. It certainly isn't very common. Nor is it in the least bit ethical."

No shit, Sherlock. I raised my head slightly. "Uh, just out of curiosity. If they'd managed to railroad me like that, would you have let them follow through with it, or cut me loose?"

She regarded me coolly. "If they'd been successful, then I wouldn't even be involved. It would all depend on whether you were able to convince Director Piggot that it wasn't really your fault, absent evidence to the contrary."

Sarah's eyebrows drew down. "This isn't raising my expectations about the treatment Wyvern might get if someone else manages to slip one past the PRT's bullshit filters, just saying. I think there needs to be a clause in there about that. Also, we need to make sure that a specific clause doesn't make it in."

Carol looked over at her sister. "You mean, nothing gets in along the lines of, 'If Wyvern perpetrates X, she is to be shoehorned into the Wards'? Yeah, if something like that gets tried, I'm tearing the whole thing up." Looking back toward the Chief Director, she met the woman's gaze head-on. "I mean it. After your screwups, you don't get to dangle threats over her head. You want cooperation? It's on our terms, or not at all."

Sarah nodded. "And the other clause that needs to go in there is that if Wyvern is accused of committing some atrocity or other, one that would absolutely require her to either be remanded in custody or go into the Wards, an independent body is to be convened that will investigate the incident from the point of view that she didn't do it. I've heard enough from Carol about cops and prosecutors withholding exculpatory evidence, and in her case you'd have a huge reason to do so. 'Conflict of interest' doesn't even come close to covering it."

"Hmm." Carol rubbed at her lips. "Interesting concept, and I agree in principle. But there's a lot of legal problems inherent in that, and you're basically outlining what the defense team is expected to do anyway." She took her hand away from her face, and raised a finger. "What I've got in mind is a lot simpler. If Wyvern is ever accused of any kind of egregious crime, the PRT pays her defense costs. Simple as that. We choose the defense team, you pay the bills."

"Whoa, wait a minute, time out." Hero even made the 'T' gesture with his hands as he protested. "Unless I'm totally misreading the situation, you seem to be expecting someone to do this, and working from the point of view that it'll be perpetrated by the PRT or under their orders."

Legend raised his eyebrows. "And you think it won't? There's already been one attempt so far. Power-wise, Wyvern is head and shoulders—literally—above every other cape in the city, and for quite some distance in all directions. For every person who's got a reason to thank her, I figure I can point out one who wants to pull her down in some way. Whether it's a villain who's worried about her, or a bureaucrat who wants to control her."

Carol nodded. "And besides, if it never happens, you've got nothing to worry about."

Hero grimaced, but subsided. I got the distinct impression that he wanted to protest further; the trouble was, if he did, he would look pointlessly obstructive and he knew it. Or worse: he'd look like he was planning something of that sort, and didn't want to get caught out.

I didn't personally believe that last part. We'd spoken extensively while prepping for the test, as well as afterward, and everything I'd seen pointed to his sincerity and honesty. However, there was always the chance of someone inside the PRT or Protectorate doing something stupid, and he was probably concerned about that.

Legend also seemed to pick up on that. "Worried someone might try taking her down, or taking her in, on your behalf? I strongly suggest that you give orders to cover that scenario. You too, Becky. Don't want any more scandals darkening your door now, do we?"

My head came up; I'd been unaware of any such scandals, and I wanted to hear more. Carol and Sarah—and Vicky and Amy, and Mark and Neil, all of whom had been spectating from the background—looked similarly intrigued. But I said nothing. If Legend wanted the story told, he'd tell it.

"I wouldn't exactly say there's been scandals—" began Hero, putting on a brave front.

Legend interrupted him ruthlessly. "I would. Or they would've been, if the Protectorate and PRT hadn't suppressed them." He raised an eyebrow. "And that doesn't even count the three separate times someone's taken a shot at me since I walked away from the Protectorate. High-powered rifle, shooter paid via anonymous dead-drop. And one of them was PRT."

Hero spoke up hastily. "Ex-PRT. I followed that one up. He'd been let go, six months before, for conduct unbecoming."

Legend's expression showed patent disbelief. "Of course he had. It just wouldn't do to have me popped by a current employee of the PRT, would it? The media shitstorm would be so far beyond epic, you'd both lose your jobs, and the funding for both the PRT and Protectorate would be slashed like pumpkin prices on November first."

The Chief Director frowned slightly. "Are you accusing me, in front of witnesses, of orchestrating deliberate attempts on your life? Be very careful about what you're saying, here."

"I made no such statements." Legend's tone was as bland as his expression. "I merely asked the same questions that any rational person in my situation would ask." He turned to Carol. "Mrs Dallon, did you hear an accusation in any part of what I said?"

"I did not," agreed Carol, equally blandly. "Chief Director, Hero, do either of you have any objection to what we've already agreed on, including Legend assisting in Wyvern's training? We still have to nail down exact numbers, of course, keeping in mind that Wyvern still has college in front of her yet."

Legend smiled. "I am entirely in favour of the PRT paying for Wyvern's future education. It's about time they did something for capes instead of just exploiting them. Hero?"

I couldn't help but feel the slightest twinge of sympathy for Hero at that point. He was a legitimately nice guy, but the Chief Director was a hardass of the highest order and we all knew he'd be expected to follow her lead. His eyes flicked from Legend to me to Carol to his boss, while his expression grew ever more hunted.

"… we can, uh, look at the numbers and see what we come up with, sure," he prevaricated at last.

Carol's expression would've made the average great white shark back away nervously and seek healthier climates. "Yes," she agreed. "We will."

<><>​

Geonchugga

The truck was slow and its suspension was rough, but that was the best they were going to get even after Geonchugga had applied his skills to it. A dozen men and women in powered armour did not make for a light load; had he not reinforced the vehicles, they would've broken down after a hundred yards. As it was, they were rumbling through Brockton Bay at a steady pace, hitting every pothole (or so it felt) on the back streets as they went.

He'd built radios into each set of armour, but for the purpose of simplicity, only the team leaders had the range to reach across the city; the others were merely for communications within their own team. This slowed things down slightly when it came to getting ongoing reports, but prevented every person on the strike force from hogging the airwaves. It also meant that as the truck rolled onward, he could listen in on the progress of the three decoy groups.

Group B had the farthest to go, so they'd started off first. Groups A and C were already on station, just waiting for the word to proceed. The truck he was in had been held up in traffic, so he was a little behind schedule, but that didn't matter. Great Inago wasn't waiting on a deadline, after all.

He keyed his radio, contacting the driver in the cab. "How long until we reach our destination?" Even now, it was wise to not speak such phrases as 'PRT building' over the air in case someone was listening.

"Five minutes. No more." The driver didn't address him as 'honoured one' for the same reason that he hadn't mentioned the PRT building. Their communications had to be as unremarkable as possible.

"Good." He keyed to the channel used by the other strike group leaders. "Group B, how copy?"

"Group B copies loud and clear. Just pulling into the parking lot now, over."

"Good. All groups, commence operations on my word. Acknowledge orders."

"Group A acknowledges."

"Group B acknowledges."

"Group C acknowledges.
"

A heady feeling of wild excitement swelled in his chest. Like a magician from the old stories, he was about to speak words that would unleash chaos and fury across the city. "Excellent. Commence."

Flicking the radio onto the team channel, he took a deep breath before speaking. "The decoy operations are commencing now. We will be in position in five minutes. Ready yourselves."

Almost as one, they all sat up straighter, but he had more to do. Flicking the radio to another citywide channel, he spoke yet again. "Pigeon One, Seagull One, Lizard One, the hour has come."

Pigeon One was a spotter emplaced near the PRT building, ready to report on trooper movements. Likewise, Seagull One was on the Boardwalk, taking photos of anything and everything in sight but keeping an eye on the Protectorate base. And Lizard One was sitting in a parked car around the corner from the Dallon house—Ha-joon wasn't stupid enough to assume New Wave wouldn't check out every suspicious loiterer within sight of the house itself—with a clear view of the sky above.

"Pigeon One, ready. No movement."

"Seagull One, ready. The bridge is open."
That was useful information. The force field bridge meant that one or more land-bound capes from the Protectorate base were about to move out.

"Lizard One, ready. No movement."
The New Wave fliers would be fairly obvious when they took off, and Wyvern triply so.

"Good. Keep me posted." He turned the radio back to the strike group channel, knowing that he would get an alert if any of the lookouts tried to get hold of him. There were no progress reports as yet, but he knew they would come.

His men and women were used to the suits by now, and would be more than a match for any security guards they encountered. In a very short time, there would be urgent calls for help coming in from the three targeted locations, alerting the PRT and Protectorate capes within the city. They would be forced to split their teams three ways to deal with all the emergencies at once, only leaving a skeleton team behind in the PRT building.

Ha-joon had only ever been mediocre at chess, but in this moment he felt like a grandmaster, moving his pawns across the board in preparation for a devastating checkmate.

I was born for this.

<><>​

Wyvern

Hero had an electronic pad in his hand, but I would've put long odds against it being a commercial model. "Okay, so if we assume—" He paused as the Chief Director's phone rang, then his joined in shortly after.

I was just starting to wonder what was up in the wider world of the PRT and Protectorate when Carol's phone also rang. Chief Director Costa-Brown had hers out by now, and Hero was subvocalising inside his helmet, or at least his lips were moving. Carol answered her phone, and her eyes widened.

"Well, something's going on." Sarah looked around at the three of them. "Would any of you like to fill the rest of us in?"

"It's the … Asian Bad Boys?" Hero didn't sound certain of the name. "They're using powered-armour troops to raid a bank, a mall and a country club. There are hostages."

"Ugggh." I facepalmed as a bad feeling began to build. "Are they calling me out by name?"

The Chief Director frowned. "Not that I've been informed of. Do you think this is because you captured Inago?"

I shrugged. "Well, what else could it be? If they're not challenging me directly, this has gotta be their way of saying that they can't be counted down and out. Maybe they'll threaten to kill the hostages if Inago isn't released or something."

Hero shook his head. "That's been tried before. It just gets kill orders. If the PRT backed down for hostage takers, they'd never keep a prisoner."

"It doesn't mean these idiots won't try anyway." Carol's tone was remarkably cynical. "The ABB's been getting away with a lot of crap for a long time, mainly because they've had the backing of Inago. If I had to guess, I'd say they can't imagine not being able to do what they want in this city."

Now that the discussion had moved away from my potential partnership with the PRT, Vicky evidently felt comfortable with interjecting. "Yeah, that's gonna fly. We're gonna have to take them down, once and for all."

I took a deep breath, trying to clear my mind. "So, we're talking the Central Bank and the Augustus Country Club, yeah?" There were several malls they could be at.

The Chief Director nodded curtly. "Do you have any insights on how to deal with them?"

I glanced at Vicky and Sarah. "I think so, for the country club anyway. Me and a couple of others could deal with that one, all by ourselves."

Carol didn't look thrilled at the idea. "Wyvern, can you still fit inside the building when you're big enough to use non-flame attacks? Because I'm pretty sure that fire isn't going to be the best idea here, and if you just do a frontal attack, they'll start killing hostages."

"They're using shotguns," Hero interjected. "In case that helps."

"It totally does." I nodded. "Vicky, Mrs Pelham. We got this." And I explained how.

"Damn right we do." Vicky gave me a high five.

"Well, okay then." Hero looked and sounded downright impressed. "We'll focus on the other two locations, then. I should be able to Tinker up something similar."

Sarah glanced at the Chief Director. "If you can have some troopers sent out that way to collect the prisoners once we've dealt with them, that would be great."

"That can be done." Chief Director Costa-Brown was all business now. "We'll revisit this after we've dealt with the problem at hand."

"Great." I glanced at Vicky. "Imma go Change. Want to come give me a hand with the doorknob?"

"Sure." Vicky followed me toward the stairs. "We'll be down in a second, Aunt Sarah."

"There's another strong possibility," the Chief Director noted as we headed upstairs. "That these are distractions for a breakout attempt on Inago. In which case …"

<><>​

Geonchugga

All three diversionary attacks were going well. Resistance had been minimal, as expected, and there had been no casualties among his forces. They hadn't even had to hurt anyone seriously; the security guards had dropped their weapons and put their hands up as soon as they'd seen what they were up against.

The lookouts had done their jobs as well, though they had reported one potential snag. Heroes leaving the Protectorate base and troopers driving out of the PRT building were as per expectations, but Lizard One had noted not only the New Wave fliers (and Wyvern) leaving the Dallon house, but also Hero and someone who looked remarkably like Legend. A member of the Triumvirate, as well as an ex-member of the core Protectorate, were threats in the making, but Ha-joon told himself that all was still under control.

As effective as Hero and Legend were, they were still just individual capes. They couldn't be all over the city at once, so it didn't matter. The gang members on those sites would be more likely to suffer capture than their fellows, but they should be honoured to be trading their freedom for that of great Inago.

All Ha-joon could think was, I hope he will be appreciative of their sacrifice.

The timer in his helmet ticked down to zero. "Go!" he commanded over the team channel. "Go, go, go!"

They piled out of the back of the truck in short order. Once they were clear, the last man out closed the rear doors and slapped them twice. The truck moved off again; it would be much harder to disable their transport if it wasn't sitting there in the one spot.

Ha-joon was already heading for the main doors. Pigeon One had reported multiple vehicles leaving the PRT building just minutes earlier, which meant the coast was as clear as it would ever be. He had no idea how many troopers were left in the building, but it had to be far fewer than before he'd started his attacks.

The doors were locked; or at least, they didn't open when he stepped up to them. That was fine. He hadn't been expecting to depend on the PRT just letting him walk right in.

Raising his armoured fist, he fired four heavy explosive penetrators into the doors. As obdurate as the thick polycarbonate was, it couldn't stand up to such close-range assaults; the doors starred from the impacts, then disintegrated altogether when the payloads detonated. Beyond, the roller-door would have proven no obstacle to his armour anyway, but the blast wave from the explosive penetrators dealt with it before he had to.

Stepping through the ruins of the barrier, he encountered PRT troopers rushing into the lobby. Two had assault rifles, while the other two hefted containment foam sprayers. Even as the rifles opened up, the bullets ricocheting from his armour like so many raindrops, he enveloped the room with a spray of his own. The water-based lubricant made the floor so slick that all four troopers lost their footing in seconds. Finally, a shot from the laser on his right forearm breached one of the foam tanks, enveloping the troopers in a mass of the sticky yellow stuff.

The soles of his boots were highly water-repellent; where the troopers had lost all traction on the tiled floor, he strode through in full confidence for his footing. His people followed, shotguns up and ready for action. "Two of you guard the door!" he commanded. "Don't let anyone block us in!"

"Yes, honoured one." The last two bowed respectfully. Their response time had reduced dramatically since he'd first assumed temporary command of the Azn Bad Boys. He smiled inside his helmet; this was something he could get used to.

A tiny voice deep inside told him that Inago would be jealous of the stature he had gained within the gang, but he ignored it. He had a mission, and nothing would stand in his way. Not the Protectorate, not the PRT, nobody.

Previous moles within the PRT building had provided a reasonable layout to work with. He headed for the only elevator in the lobby that went down to the holding-cell level. It was, predictably, locked down. The hacking software in his suit could possibly have overridden it, but he chose not to take the time. Instead, he disabled the other elevators, then blew open the doors of the correct one and blasted a hole in the floor.

More PRT troopers were swarming out of the stairwell by now, but his people had the situation well in hand. Where their specific combat training was lacking, their power armour gave them the edge in strength and durability, and they were able to get into close combat where containment foam could not be used. They'd sparred with each other, but this was the first chance they'd had to go all-out against an opponent, and they were revelling in the moment.

Attaching a rappelling cable to the interior of the elevator—he'd be using his boot jets on the way up, but it was better to conserve the fuel—he dropped into the shaft, drawing ever closer to his goal.

They said it couldn't be done. Well, I'm doing it.

<><>​

Wyvern

We were halfway to the Augustus Country Club—Sarah providing an aerodynamic shell and Vicky adding her flight speed—when Sarah's cell-phone rang. Taking it out of its pouch, she put it on speaker. "Hello, Director Piggot. Glory Girl, Panacea and Wyvern are also on the call."

"Understood. Situation update: as well as the other attacks, the ABB is assaulting the PRT building with powered-armour troops. Had you concluded an agreement between Wyvern and the PRT?"

"Not yet." Sarah's eyes met mine. I rolled my eyes in response to her unspoken comment. Had the partnership been laid out and agreed on in full, Piggot may well have attempted to order me back to defend her building. "Besides, we're committed to clearing out the Augustus Country Club. Who are they coming after, you or Inago?"

"Inago, it seems." With that admission was a tacit acceptance that the loss of a prisoner was less important than the danger to the country club staff and patrons. "We've ramped up our security on the prison level, but they're forcing their way through anyway." I could almost hear her teeth gritting over that last part.

"Well, once we finish at Augustus, we'll be heading your way. Lady Photon, out." Sarah cut the call and glanced at the rest of us.

I was in wyvern form so I couldn't comment, but Vicky was capable of doing so for both of us. "Holy shit, they're actually going for it. They're busting Inago out of holding."

I chirped in agreement, then growled. It was very irritating; I'd spent a lot of effort capturing that asshole in the first place.

"And she wasn't at all happy that Taylor was already on the way out here." Amy put her arm around me for a comforting side-hug. "She really wants to be able to tell you what to do, instead of asking."

This time, my chirp was as sarcastic as I could make it, aided and abetted with an expressive roll of my eyes. Vicky snorted with amusement. "Hah, you're not wrong. That's every person in authority ever."

Sarah smiled briefly, then became serious as she indicated the main building of the Augustus Country Club, just coming into view. "Okay, enough of the chit-chat. Game faces on. Vicky, Taylor: you're up."

Of course I knew I was up. This was my damn plan.

As the surrounding force field opened up, I jumped out and spread my wings. Vicky also flew out, but while I maintained altitude, she streaked for the ground. There were two guys (or maybe girls) out on the portico of the country club, but while they tracked her with their weapons, they didn't fire, mainly because she wasn't going for them or the front doors. Also, I was pretty sure they only had shotguns, not longer-range weapons.

In the meantime, I was going for size. Lots and lots of size.

As Sarah kept the force-field pod holding Amy out of my wing-reach—with every wingbeat, I covered more and more area—I expanded with every intake of breath. This wasn't like Eagleton, or even Ellisburg. No innocents had been at risk, then. Neither was it even like the thing with the Nine. This time around, I had all the tools for the job, and I intended to use them correctly.

By the time I was up past airliner size, and casting a significant shadow over the ground below, two more armoured guys had shown up on the portico. My improved dragon-sight gave me details about their armour, and even—once I went to the violet form with silver highlights—let me see exactly where everyone was in the building. It seemed they were all gathered in the main dining hall, with powered-armour goons surrounding the hostages.

I could also see the electricity flowing throughout the whole building: lighting, appliances, heating, the works. And then, as Vicky ripped the cover off the main power breaker and flipped the switch, all that died. The only sources of electricity within the building were the ABB idiots in their power armour.

Why, thank you. I don't mind if I do.

I hadn't wanted to try this while the mains were on, in case I burned out every wire in the building, but this was a whole different matter. Breathing out through my nostrils, I paused for a moment then inhaled. My lungs were enormous by now, and it took a lot to fill them, but along with the air came all the ambient electricity in the building below.

In an instant, the goons on the portico were frozen, trying to lift their guns while wearing a hundred pounds or more of inert metal on their bodies. Before they could get used to the changed situation, Vicky was there, smashing into them and ripping the shotguns from their hands. Then she headed into the building proper; reducing in size, I flew down after her, with Sarah and Amy following close behind.

By the time we got inside, all the powered armour idiots were down. Vicky, it seemed, really enjoyed her work. She looked around at us with a broad grin, in the process of bending the last shotgun into an entirely unnecessary horseshoe, and gave me a thumb's up.

"That was awesome!" she exulted. "Wyvern, you kicked ass!"

"Not over yet," Sarah cautioned her. "Panacea?"

"On it." Amy stepped out of the force field bubble and approached the hostages, who were all still sitting on the floor. "Does anyone here have a pacemaker?"

Three of the older men raised their hands, and she made her way over to them. There was nothing I could do to assist there, and it was probably better for me to just stand there and look pretty for the released hostages, so I did that. Vicky and I shared a satisfied nod, though.

The Augustus Country Club was clear, but the larger crisis still beckoned.

One way or another, the ABB was going down today.



End of Part Twenty-Seven
 
Last edited:
Now that the discussion had moved away from my potential partnership with the PRT, Vicky evidently felt comfortable with interjecting. "Yeah, that's gonna fly. We're gonna have to take them down, once and for all."
Yeah, that's not gonna fly
 
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Part Twenty-Eight: Conflicts of Interest New
Wyvern

Part Twenty-Eight: Conflicts of Interest

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



Beneath the PRT Building

Geonchugga


Bypassing the level he suspected the Wards to be housed on, Ha-joon paused to weld their elevator doors shut with his laser. They would be entirely capable of getting it open, given time; however, he was going to use that time to free great Inago. Then he continued to drop toward the lower level.

A combination of explosive penetrators and laser cutting got him through the surprisingly well-armoured doors at the bottom of the shaft, and he found himself facing yet more troopers. These ones didn't bother shouting commands; they just started shooting and spraying containment foam. He weathered one with ease and allowed the other to slide off the lubricated outer surface of his armour.

He triggered his boot jets briefly, leaping forward over the top of the PRT guards. Activating his lasers again, he carved open the foam tanks, the resultant release of the substance gluing all four guards into a struggling heap. Only one could bring his rifle to bear after that, but Ha-joon reached forward and pulled the weapon from his grasp, discarding it to one side.

There was little time to waste. He trusted his men to do their duty by him and great Inago, but once the PRT and Protectorate forces started collapsing in on the PRT building (not to mention Wyvern herself), they would not be able to hold out for long. So he hastened into the prison wing, searching the cells for his leader.

Most of them were empty, but he saw one that seemed to have been reinforced more than the others, so he went in that direction. When he got there, Inago was standing on the far side of the polycarbonate barrier.

His expression upon seeing Ha-joon was difficult to interpret, though his grasp of the situation was immaculate. "Geonchugga! Get me out of here!"

"Yes, great Inago!" That's what I'm doing, he managed to refrain from saying. But honestly, what else did Inago think he was down there for? "Please step back to avoid the shrapnel."

Inago reluctantly retreated a few steps, and Ha-joon aimed his arm at the polycarbonate. It was durable enough to contain capes, but could it withstand his weaponry?

One after another, he fired four explosive penetrators into the barrier. They stuck halfway in, which had been his intent. Stepping back, he shielded his visor with his arm—it was almost as bulletproof as the rest of his armour, but there were limits—and triggered the detonators.

Four explosions came as one, and the polycarbonate fractured in several directions at once. It had already cracked when he shot the penetrators into it, and this came as the last straw. Stepping forward into the cloud of smoke generated by the explosives, he smashed a single kick into the middle of the mass of fractures. It came apart into several large chunks, leaving a hole large enough for a child to walk through unimpeded, or an adult to stoop through.

As he'd anticipated, the explosions and subsequent breaching of the barrier triggered a failsafe; containment foam sprayed from nozzles situated in all four corners of the cell. As fast as Inago lunged for the hole, he could not outdistance them. But Ha-joon was already countering it with a spray of his own into the cell. The lubricant covered Inago before the containment reached him, causing the yellowish substance to slither off him instead of encasing his body.

Unfortunately, Inago had no means of maintaining his traction; his feet went out from under him and he sprawled in an ignominious fashion. "Geonchugga!" he bellowed, scrabbling for some means of making forward progress. "What have you done?"

"I have it under control, great Inago!" Bending almost double, Ha-joon stepped into the cell and reached out with his gauntlet. Its gripping surfaces were covered with the same water-repelling material he'd put on the soles of the boots, so that when he clasped Inago's flailing forearm, he was able to form a solid grasp. Stepping back through the hole, he towed his leader out of the feeble embrace of the foam to a point where he could pull himself free and climb out.

Once in the corridor, great Inago straightened to his full height … then promptly fell on his ass as his feet skidded out from under him. "Geonchugga!" His eyes were starting to bulge with anger, in a way that presaged a transition to his insectoid form. "Are you trying to make me look foolish?"

The last time someone had made Inago look even remotely stupid, Oni Lee had slashed their throat approximately fifteen seconds later. But Oni Lee wasn't here, which meant Inago would likely be wanting to do the job himself. "No, great Inago. I'm just trying to get you out of here. Please, hold still for a moment."

He'd taken the precaution of preparing a small amount of counteragent for the lubricant, just in case it was needed. This particular situation hadn't occurred to him, but that was what 'just in case' was for. Activating the appropriate menu item in his HUD, he sprayed the counteragent over Inago's hands and feet.

"At last!" Inago clambered to his feet again, his anger apparently as strong as ever. "I've had enough of your incompetent bullshit!"

"A thousand apologies for the inconvenience." Ha-joon didn't feel particularly apologetic, but if it got Inago moving, then he'd say the words. He tamped down the anger that was stirring at the harsh treatment. This was Inago. The whole operation had been put in motion to free him to lead the ABB to glory once more. "We need to hurry."

At least Inago didn't argue about that part. Ha-joon didn't have time to explain the details of the plan; their only hope was to get out before his rearguard was overwhelmed by incoming reinforcements. He set off back the way he'd come, taking care not to leave Inago behind.

We should be able to break out of any cordon they set up.

Barring outside interference, anyway.


<><>​

Merchants Base

Roadhog


"Ma'am! Ma'am! You've got to hear this!"

Sherrel Bailey looked around from where she was working on her latest ride. The gyrostabilisers for the rear sections had been acting up, and she wanted them functioning properly before she took it out for another spin. However, from the way one of her minions had just burst into her workshop, it looked like she wasn't going to get her wish. "Yeah, what is it?"

He stopped in front of her, chest heaving. Pete, his name was. After Skidmark's (un)timely demise, she'd steered the Merchants toward more doing actual crime and less getting fucked up on drugs all the time. It was a bad look for the gang, she figured, to have someone drop dead of a heart attack from overdosing in the middle of robbing a fucking convenience store. As a result, some of the hangers-on had dropped away but more had stuck around, and Pete was one of them.

"ABB's making a move," he panted. "They've hit the PRT building, plus a few other places. Wearing power armour. I think they're trynna bust Inago out."

"Oh, for fuck's sake." That was the last thing she needed.

Up until now, Geonchugga had never stood out or shown any leadership capability. He'd kept his head down and used his tech to support Inago, and that was it. But now, with Oni Lee dead and Inago in PRT holding, it seemed the little shit had managed to reach down and find a pair.

With her tech to face off against Geonchugga's, the rest of the Merchants would've had a field day against the unpowered ABB rank and file, allowing her to take some territory back. But if he was actually building power armour for his troops, that was a whole new ball game, especially if he also managed to free that fucker Inago.

Oh, no you fucking don't.

"What are we gonna do, ma'am?" Pete was looking at her hopefully. He might be mildly stoned (it wasn't like they'd given up on the drugs altogether) but he was totally capable of stepping up and doing what needed to be done.

"Get everyone together," she said grimly. "It's time to go and show those ABB fucks how the Merchants do business."

Unless Wyvern jumps on us, she silently admitted. Wherever the hell she is, I hope she stays away.

<><>​

Augustus Country Club

Wyvern


Just as Amy finished ensuring that the last pacemaker guy was stable, Vicky came swooping in from outside. Typical for her, she hadn't bothered to land yet. "First responders are about one minute away," she reported. "No other bad guys around that I can see."

"Good." Sarah had been using her lasers and force fields to rip the depowered power armour off the gang thugs, just in case they had hidden batteries or something; now she dusted her hands off and gestured to the door. "Time to go. They still need us at the PRT building."

We hustled outside and Sarah started forming the force field around us. As she did so, a thought occurred to me, and I caught Vicky's eye with an urgent chirp. We can't just short out the whole PRT building, I wanted to tell her. Director Piggot might get upset. My lightning breath wasn't exactly a precision attack.

"Shit, what is it?" she asked me. I tried to think of how to tell it in charades, but there was no real way. Finally, I settled for pointing to the busted-open breaker box with my wingtip.

Amy frowned. "Is she saying we should turn the power back on?"

"Not a good idea," Sarah advised. "The electrical system needs to be checked over before they do that. No telling what subtle damage her power might've done."

I squawked in negation and shook my head firmly as the force field lifted off the ground with us inside. Never had I felt my lack of being able to talk so keenly. Just for a moment, I was tempted to grow to a size where I could, but that would slow down our progress and we needed to get there fast. Finally, I started tapping on the floor of the force field bubble in a random pattern, glanced at Vicky, then did it again.

"Shit, I'm an idiot!" Vicky facepalmed. "Aunt Sarah, that alphabet sheet she used to communicate with. Can you make that, here?"

"Of course." With the merest effort of concentration, the letters of the alphabet appeared before me, like the world's biggest keyboard. "Talk to us, Taylor."

As rapidly as I could, I tapped out the letters while Amy and Sarah watched; Vicky was engaged in pushing the force-field bubble as fast as possible, back toward town.

T-E-L-L P-R-T T-U-R-N O-F-F P-O-W-E-R. As I tapped the letters, they appeared above the 'keyboard', again courtesy of Sarah. It was very useful.

"Yes, of course. Thank you, Taylor." She looked like she wanted to face-palm as well, but instead she pulled out her phone and woke it up.

"It'll need careful timing," Vicky noted tensely. "There's probably some important stuff they can't just turn off at will in there."

"I'll leave the fine-tuning to Director Piggot." Sarah hit speed-dial and held her phone to her ear. "Hello, Director. We're on our way, but there's something you're going to need to do once we get there …"

<><>​

PRT ENE Building

Director Emily Piggot


"I see. Thank you." Emily ended the call, then restrained the urge to hurl the phone at the wall. It would've made her feel better, but not by much. What the hell do they think I am, some kind of action hero?

The first thing she'd done upon receiving the warning from Hero was to put the building on soft lockdown. All civilians had been ushered out, and non-essential staff evacuated (Renick had been deemed 'non-essential' but Emily refused to leave). The Wards currently on site had been sealed into their quarters; they had tanked air plus recyclers that could keep them supplied indefinitely, food for days and water for weeks.

When the ABB contingent arrived, she'd given the order for hard lockdown; armoured shutters had fallen into place, power was cut to all the elevators, and the remaining troopers on site had prepared to defend the building. Between massed firepower and containment foam, they'd expected to be able to hold out until relief arrived.

However, two aspects militated against that. First, the ABB thugs were equipped with power armour capable of deflecting bullets and shrugging off containment foam. Second, the majority were there to run interference for just one of their number, who went down the correct elevator shaft while the fight was still ongoing.

And now there was this phone call. Wyvern intended to use her 'lightning breath' (because, God help them all, that was apparently a thing) to depower all the ABB power suits on site. This would assist her troopers considerably, but there was a problem.

Because of course there was a fucking problem. There was never not a problem.

In this case, the problem was simple: she was the only one on her floor, and thus the only one who could be spared from either holding off the majority of the ABB from getting past the lobby, or guarding the stairwells and elevator shafts. She was fully aware that the four who'd been guarding the holding cell level were in dire straits, but she could do nothing to assist them. They were encased in confoam as well as their own armour, so she could only hope that they would continue to be considered a non-threat and left alone.

Emily Piggot knew quite a few people for whom the first stumbling block meant giving up. If the plan couldn't succeed at once, why even try? For her it was the opposite: true success was something to be aspired toward but never quite reached. Usually, her day ended up involving various degrees of failure mitigation.

The problem facing her personally could be summed up quite succinctly. Wyvern was on the way to draw all active electricity from the PRT building. Which meant that someone had to get to the master utility room three floors down and throw the appropriate breakers in the correct order, and do it as soon as goddamn possible.

The elevators had already been shut down (from that very room, ironically enough) so the only way down to it was via the stairs … except that the stairwell doors were all electronically locked. They'd let her into the stairwell, but until the hard lockdown was lifted, the only way out of the stairwell was via the fire escape door at ground level.

Which meant that the next few minutes were going to really, really suck.

When she initiated the soft lockdown, the first thing she'd done was to retrieve her gunbelt from the bottom drawer of her desk and strap on the venerable SIG 220 that normally resided in the knee-hole. Now, she went into her ensuite, but not to use the facilities. Beside the washbasin, hidden in plain sight, was a service door leading into the spaces between the walls. Unfortunately, it was locked, and she didn't have the key.

What she did have … was the SIG.

She had no time for niceties; standing back as far as she could (which, in the cramped ensuite, wasn't very far) she aimed the pistol two-handed at the lock and squeezed the trigger. The SIG bucked in her grip and her ears rang. Shrapnel grazed her cheek.

But the door swung open now when she tugged on it. Beyond was darkness.

And a ladder.

<><>​

Geonchugga

When Inago saw the pile of containment foam with the guards trapped in it, he smiled and flexed his fingers menacingly. Already partially covered with chitin, he now possessed serrated, claw-like digits; as Ha-joon well knew, they could slash or gouge to horrific effect. "These men must die." He spoke in the tone of someone who has already made the decision, not merely voicing an opinion.

"Great Inago, our window for escape narrows." Ha-joon had no particular fellow-feeling for the PRT guards. They had been shooting at him not so long ago, after all. But neither could he blame them for attempting to carry out their duty. And he'd long since determined that any kind of senseless killing during this breakout would bring down disproportionate retribution from the PRT and Protectorate.

The ABB was good. Great Inago was very good. But Wyvern had captured him once, and her more persistent opponents tended to die. Oni Lee's fate was a fair indicator of that, as was Jack Slash's.

But Inago ignored him, glaring at the guards. "They held me captive. Mocked me in my cell. Told me that I would be standing trial for my crimes, and be locked away forever. Me. Lord of Insects. They die, as do all who stand with them."

As he spoke, his body became more insectile. Chitin had now grown out over his back, and covered the rest of his body. A swarm of insects, generated by his power, hummed and buzzed around them.

However, the bugs could not get to the guards due to the containment foam and the armour they were wearing, so Ha-joon was hopeful that he'd pass them by. "Great Inago …" he prompted, gesturing down the corridor toward their escape route.

"Keep your hands off me," snarled Inago, although Ha-joon had not touched him. "When they find these men, they will know the penalty for locking me away and treating me like a petty criminal."

For a moment, it looked as though he was going to assault them directly, but he thought better of it. His hands were now clear of the lubricant, which meant containment foam would adhere to them. And the guards were covered in the stuff.

"Great Inago …?" Time was definitely running out.

"Silence!" The word was echoed by the swarm now half-filling the corridor. Inago flexed his hands and looked around, then finally saw the discarded assault rifle. "Yes. Yes, that will do very nicely." Leaning down, he took it up. "Killed with their own weapons. That's definitely a fitting way for them to die."

His hands were not best fitted to handle the rifle, but he managed well enough, pulling back the charging handle to ensure there was a round in the breech, and carefully fitting a serrated fingertip through the trigger-guard. Ha-joon watched in silent apprehension, though he suspected that the guards were feeling a good deal more than mere 'apprehension'. Containment foam protected against gross physical impacts to a certain extent, but it was only mildly bullet-resistant. Against close-range assault-rifle fire, it would be basically useless.

"Great Inago, do not do that." Normally he wouldn't have spoken up at all, but this threatened to overturn his entire carefully-planned operation. "You are already slated for the Birdcage. This will force them to enact a Kill Order on you."

Inago turned to look at him from multi-faceted eyes, mandibles already growing from the corners of his mouth. "Let them try," he buzz/hummed. "I will destroy all who challenge me, including Wyvern, and starting with these four." Turning back to the guards, he raised the rifle.

"No!" Still not daring lay a hand on his leader, Ha-joon instead reached out and grabbed the rifle. A single flex of the servos crunched the essential working parts to ruin. "They are meaningless. Our victory lies in escaping. We must go."

This time, Inago's stare at him was far more dangerous. "You dare defy me on this?" he demanded. "You, who I raised up from obscurity, and gave a place alongside me? Am I no longer your leader? Do you obey me no more? Am I being usurped?"

Ha-joon could see the verbal trap looming, but he could do little to ward it off. "No, of course not, great Inago. You are my leader, and the leader of all the ABB. But—"

Before he could continue with 'Hero and Legend are in town, and Wyvern is much more powerful than she was before', Inago cut him off.

"But nothing, worm! I am your leader, and that is all that there is to it!" He pointed toward the trapped guards. "Kill them, now! I order it!"

Ha-joon thought fast. He has not seen me use my lasers … "I cannot, great Inago. I am out of ammunition for my ranged weaponry. We must go."

More power-created bugs swarmed the corridor. Thousands were already stuck in the containment foam in their incessant attempts to get at the guards, but the foam and the armour were defeating this effort. In a different reality, Inago's glare would have immolated Ha-joon on the spot, but the Tinker stood firm.

"Fine." Even produced by bugs, Inago's voice held a distinct growl. "We will go. But this is not the end of it." Edging around the mass of foam, he headed onward. Ha-joon breathed out a silent sigh of relief, glanced at the guards—you get to go home today—then followed.

Now if all is going well on the outside, we should be free and clear.

<><>​

Legend

Keith hovered over the mall—Weymouth, or whatever it was called—while he did his best to spot activity through the skylights. Unfortunately, the ABB thugs were awake to flying opposition, and were not straying under them. From this vantage point, he could see that the PRT had every exit locked down, while the heroes prepped for entry.

"What've we got?" he asked over the earpiece radio. "Any information on their disposition at all?"

"Armsmaster, here. I've got ground-based drones inside, and I've also hacked the security feeds." The Tinker sounded pleased with himself, and so he should be.

Keith recalled hearing good things of the man before he left the Protectorate and Cauldron behind. "Talk to me."

"I count fifteen all up. There's one man on each entrance, and the rest have got the shoppers and staff in a bunch in the central food court. Armed with shotguns, wearing basic powered armour. No bodies, no apparent injuries. So far."

"I see. Well done. Now, all we need to do is—" He paused. "Wait. Something's happening." To the untrained eye, it wouldn't have seemed unusual, but his visual clarity was unparalleled. Coming in from the west was a pattern of disturbance and distortion that reminded him of nothing so much as a column of soldiers on the march, only invisible and vastly sped up. "Clear the western entrance, now now now!"

He had no formal authority here, but nobody had said a word, even though Hero was handling the situation at the bank. When he spoke, people listened; and now, when he gave the order, the troopers and heroes scattered to each side. He didn't know what was coming in, but he knew it was best to ensure the welfare of his own people before opening hostilities with it.

The disturbance crossed the parking lot, smashing aside a PRT van, then entered the mall itself. Distantly, Keith heard the sound of the glass doors shattering … then nothing.

What the hell's going on down there?

<><>​

Roadhog

"Okay, guys!" yelled Sherrel as the Godzillapede skittered across the parking lot toward the mall. "Get ready! It's time to kick AB-butt!"

Cheers rang in her ears from back along the vehicle. After Adam's 'regrettable' demise (she only regretted not backing up over him years earlier) she'd instituted a few changes in the Merchants. People still got high, but after jobs, not before them. Without him there to pressure her into taking that extra toke, she found she was easing off slightly. Not so much as to go cold turkey—fuck that with a rusty chainsaw—but just enough that her head was a little bit more clear, a little bit more often.

In the process of upgrading the Merchants to a new level of competence, she'd also convinced Mush and Trainwreck to rebrand as Aggregate and Locomotive respectively; the names sounded cooler, and people treated them with more respect. With Whirligig, she hadn't made the effort, because it wasn't as bad as some of the other options. Adam had wanted the woman to call herself Shitstorm, but she'd held out. As far as Sherrel was concerned, 'Whirligig' was fine.

The newest cape on their roster had come in with the name of Spitfire, and Sherrel hadn't argued that one either. Neither was she a drug user, except for a little recreational cannabis every now and again, but that was also okay. Nobody's perfect.

What counted was that they were all one hundred percent behind her, and at least … say, eighty-five percent sober. On average.

As the glass doors (and surrounding wall panels) burst inward in a rain of glittering shards, Sherrel swung the nose-mounted lightning cannon and nailed the powersuit-wearing ABB asshole with it. Something exploded within his suit and he fell over, but the Godzillapede was already past him and heading deeper into the mall.

If I was gonna hold a bunch of people hostage in a mall, I'd pick a nice open area. Probably the food court.

It was amazing how clearly she was thinking now.

She'd been in the Weymouth Mall before—albeit robbing it in a smash-and-grab on a pharmacy conveniently close to the entrance—but they'd scoped the place out in the process, so she knew which way to go. The massive centipede-like mech wove its way along the concourse, scattering kiosks to the left and right. She didn't give a fuck; not her mall, not her kiosks.

"Nearly there!" she yelled, and cranked the priming handle on the lightning cannon. Right on cue, the Godzillapede burst out into the main food court area, where ten armoured guys (and girls, for all she knew or cared) were standing guard over a few hundred civs, holding shotguns. Swerving the mech so it charged directly at the nearest ABB assholes and would miss the hostages, she loosed the lightning cannon again.

Blue-white electricity crackled and arced across the food court, and she laughed maniacally as the suits went down, one after the other. Some jerked and writhed as sparks flew from their internals while others just fell over with smoke trailing from them, but so long as they went down, she didn't give a flying fuck. "Smoking's a health hazard, fucktards!" she yelled. "At least, it is the way I do it!"

Wait, that didn't sound right. Oh well, who the fuck cares.

Shotguns boomed and buckshot pattered from the exterior of the Godzillapede. There was a louder thunk, and she saw a hole appear in the side of the mech, courtesy of a shotgun slug.

"The fuck?" bellowed Aggregate. "You nearly got me!" Already clad in chunks of asphalt (at Sherrel's suggestion) he opened a hatch and jumped out. As he ran toward the two armoured thugs who'd found cover and were firing back, a gout of fire shot out of another hatchway toward a trio of them. These ones screamed and started running in circles as they caught fire.

Shotguns fired again, but Aggregate's makeshift armour took the hit. Then he punched one of them so hard he flew ten feet. That one's buddy turned and ran; Aggregate made to chase him then shrugged, picked up the shotguns and bent them in half. With nobody else to fight, he headed back to the Godzillapede.

"Okay, we've fucked up their hostage situation enough, I figure. Time to go." As soon as Aggregate was back inside, Sherrel started the mech moving forward again, heading out a different entrance. "Everyone's good? Nobody hurt?"

Four voices answered in the affirmative, and she grinned. It seemed the Godzillapede was a success.

Plus, she'd spotted some nice shops on the way in, which looked worthy of a return visit sometime.

Hell, she might even pay for some of the shit.

<><>​

Legend

By the time Keith landed, the PRT troopers were already swarming into the building under Armsmaster's direction. "What's happening?" he asked.

Armsmaster frowned. "I'm about ninety-five percent certain that the Merchants just drove one of Roadhog's creations through there, and took out most of the ABB goons on the way."

"What?" Now Legend was more lost than ever. "I thought the Merchants were villains. Why would they do something like that?"

"Not entirely sure. They do have a long-standing feud with the ABB, and this was likely their best chance to screw their rivals over. But to be honest, I don't care. The hostage situation's over, and that's what matters."

"Thank you." That was what Legend had wanted to hear. He handed over the radio earpiece. "Let Hero know I'm heading to the PRT building."

By the time Armsmaster replied, he was already long gone.

<><>​

Wyvern

The Augustus Country Club was far enough out of Brockton Bay for its members to experience rolling countryside in all directions while they were playing a brisk round of golf, instead of urban sprawl. This meant that even with Vicky pushing us at a good eighty miles an hour, it still took us a few minutes to get back to the city proper, and a little more to the PRT building. When Sarah finally let us out of the force field, the fighting was still going on down below.

She was already on the phone as Vicky and I gained altitude, and I began to size up. Lightning breath didn't kick in until at least Learjet size, after all. "Director? Is everything ready?"

<><>​

A Little Earlier

Director Piggot


While Emily had gotten over most of the problems associated with her long-standing injuries from Ellisburg, there were two that she'd never been able to shake. One was a result of the other, but together they formed a problematic duo. Specifically, the weakness in her calves due to her badly damaged muscles, and the extra weight she'd piled on in the decade of enforced idleness.

Most of the time, this wasn't a problem. She didn't walk a lot, and she took her time when she did. Neither did she climb stairs if she could help it (up or down, after one nasty near-spill) which meant elevators and escalators were her go-to for vertical transportation.

Ladders, in other words, were right out.

Going down them wasn't as bad as going up, but still not in the slightest bit enjoyable. She couldn't carry her phone for light, because she absolutely needed all the support she could get. After about three rungs down, her calves were aching and her knees wobbly, and her hands hurt from clinging to the rungs so tightly.

But she stuck to it, because her people were in trouble down below, and if this was the only way to get them out of it, this was what she was damn well going to do. Also because there was no way in hell she was going to be able to climb back up that fucking ladder. Down she climbed, one shrieking tormented rung at a time.

Thomas Calvert's face popped unbidden into her mind at some point, and she couldn't get rid of the bastard. Shortly after Ellisburg, he'd told her that his captain hadn't been climbing the ladder to the chopper fast enough, so he'd shot the man in the back so he could escape Nilbog's monsters. He'd acknowledged that he was going to be punished for this, but there was still a self-serving whine in his voice when he said it.

Fuck you, Calvert. You climbed that ladder for yourself. I'm climbing this one for everyone else.

One floor passed by, then two. It had to be two floors, because she wasn't sure she could hang on for much longer. Her calf muscles were screaming with agony by now, and she'd bitten through her lip with the effort of not giving vent to some of that pain.

Down she went, one rung at a time. One … more … rung. One … more … goddamn … fucking … rung.

And then, disaster. As she was shifting her grip, her hand spasmed and slipped. She grabbed for the ladder, her finger brushed the metal, and she was falling. The impact was massive, driving the breath from her body. But as she fought to pull air into her lungs, she registered that she was still alive. No bones were broken, even.

Her hand didn't want to do anything except curl into a claw, but she forced it to reach into her pocket and pull out her phone. Turning it on activated the screen, which didn't give her enough light. But the flashlight option did.

She was lying flat on her back on concrete, and one foot was still hung up on the rung that she'd fallen from. One step above the floor. She was bruised and still couldn't breathe properly, but she'd survived the climb.

Okay, now get up and get to the fucking utility room, unless you want to see your whole goddamn building turned into a twenty-story paperweight.

Dropping her phone on the floor—maneuvering it back into her pocket was too much trouble right at this second—she wriggled around until she could roll onto her stomach, then force her limbs to lift her onto all fours. They protested, but she ignored that. Then she reached up and got a grasp on the ladder, forcing herself to a kneeling position.

It was time for a breather, so she held herself upright while she forced air into her lungs. Then, before she could slump down again, she retrieved her phone—because she was damn sure she wouldn't be bending down to pick it up once she was on her feet—and hauled herself bodily upright. Her knees were jelly and her calf muscles kept blasting waves of pain through the rest of her body, but she kept her feet through sheer willpower.

Nilbog didn't beat me, and I'm not going to let the ABB win, either.

One shaky step at a time, leaning against the wall, got her to the service door that led out into the building proper. Fortunately, from this side, it was just a simple turn-latch. Her fingers felt about ninety years old and riddled with arthritis, but she managed it on the second attempt.

She half-fell out into the corridor but caught herself on the door frame at the last moment. The utility room was just up ahead; leaving the service door open, she stumbled in that direction. When she got there, it was locked, but her all-access swipe got her inside.

Being the Director came with some perks, after all.

Just as she staggered into the room, her phone rang. Her hands were working slightly better now, so it only took her two tries to answer it. "Piggot," she rasped.

"Director?" It was Lady Photon. "Is everything ready?"

"Give me … a moment." Emily paused to catch her breath. "Shutting down power … now." She would've gotten on the radio to warn the troopers below, but like an idiot she'd left the two-way on her desk.

"Thank you, Director. I'll let Wyvern know." The call ended.

Emily wiped the sweat from her brow and tried to concentrate. She'd actually been walked through this procedure once before, but that was months ago. There was a procedure, she knew, and if she got it badly wrong, she could burn out whole sections of wiring.

Reaching out, she flipped breakers one at a time, feeling her way through the sequence. If she got it wrong, she was going to do damage; however, if she did nothing or did it too slowly, damage would happen anyway. No pressure.

One at a time, she flipped the subsidiary breakers. Then finally, she hit the big one. There was actually a key in place to lock this one, protecting it from being accidentally flipped. Lifting the protective cover, she turned the key. Then she took a deep breath and clicked it over.

Darkness fell, mitigated only by the glow of her phone screen, and the tiny LEDs of the control panel in front of her.

If you're gonna do it, do it now.

<><>​

Wyvern

Hovering above the PRT building, I surveyed it with my dragonsight. In the lightning-breath form, I could see the electricity coursing through the wires then blinking out, section by section. Thank you, Director Piggot. I really, really didn't want to be on the hook for hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of repairs. After the whole building went dark to me, I began to inhale deeply.

Streamers of electricity came up to me; I suspected that there were going to be a lot of unattended phones and laptops with flat batteries, but this was also affecting the powered armour of the attackers. It barely began to fill my 'lungs' before it all petered out, and I stopped inhaling.

"All-righty!" Vicky pumped her fist in the air. "Let's go mop these suckers up!" She swooped downward, with Sarah (still carrying Amy in her force field) beside her. I followed, already downsizing again. It wasn't as though I'd need anything more than a few nasty words and maybe a cutting flame to get these jerks out of their armour.

Legend showed up then, swooping down for a landing in front of the building. "How's it going here?" he called out.

Vicky grinned. "Well, with any luck, Wyvern just turned the lot of them into lawn ornaments. Did you bring a crowbar?"

Legend produced a red laser from his fingertip that lanced two yards into the air, then cut out. "Why, yes. Yes, I did."

"Well, then." Sarah strode forward into the smashed-open doors as the lights began to come back on. "Let's see what's left in here."

<><>​

A Few Moments Earlier

Geonchugga


Looking up the elevator shaft, Ha-joon nodded as he listened to the sound of ongoing combat. "The way is still clear, great Inago. Is the opening wide enough for you to use your wings, or will you allow me to carry you up to freedom?"

"Again, you try my patience." It seemed captivity had not improved Inago's temper in the slightest. "Why is there not a ladder, or even a rope? Why must you show at every turn that I am dependent upon you?"

"That's not my intention, I assure you." Ha-joon gritted his teeth, wanting to yell at Inago to stop wasting time and choose an option. "I can perhaps fly up and lower a cable." But even as he spoke, his head came up as something strange occurred. His HUD was registering a perilous drain on his power reserves at the same time as a sliver-blue streamer emerged from his power armour and shot up the elevator shaft.

Instinctively, he triggered an emergency shutdown. The HUD went dark, as the armour settled into immobility around him. He wasn't quite sure what had just happened, but the streamer had looked remarkably similar to what he'd seen on footage of the destruction of Eagleton.

"What was that?" asked Inago. "What just happened?"

"A power drain attack!" shouted Ha-joon, hoping his voice would be heard outside the helmet. "Wyvern can—"

"So, your armour is drained of power?" Inago, already grown huge, loomed over him. "Then I have no more use for you." His arm came around in a blur, smashing into Ha-joon's chest and knocking him off his feet. "You would usurp my position, so you must die."

"Wait, no, I meant no such—" Ha-joon's protest was cut off by another smashing blow that spun the suit sideways. Desperately, he clicked the chin-switch that would restore power. Nothing happened.

Inago stood over him, one massive foot raising into the air. Ha-joon's armour was good, but he was reasonably sure his chest would be crushed—

The HUD sprang to life as the suit powered up again. Ha-joon would have triggered his leg jets if they'd been online, but the suit was still working its way down the priority list. But he did have something. Bringing his arm up, he fired four explosive penetrators, one after the other. The first took Inago in the face, while the other three smashed into his chest.

Half a second later, they exploded.

Bits of chitin ricocheted everywhere, as Inago's headless (and virtually chestless) corpse toppled over backward. Ha-joon shielded his visor from the worst of it, then slowly climbed to his feet. He felt battered and bruised from the buffeting he'd taken, but that was nothing compared to the sickness welling up in his heart.

"Great Inago," he whispered. "I only wished to serve."

But it was too late, and he suspected Inago would not have believed him anyway.

The fighting above had ceased. He knew what had happened. The suits he'd made did not have the emergency shutdown mechanism that his was equipped with, so the men inside them would be helpless at the hands of the PRT and the heroes.

There was nothing for him here.

Stepping into the elevator shaft, he lit off his boot jets and powered upward. His explosive penetrators blasted a hole in the top of the damaged elevator car, and he kept on going up.

<><>​

Lobby of the PRT Building

Glory Girl


It was clear to Vicky that the fight was over, and the ABB had lost. Every single one of them, previously able to hold their own against the PRT troopers, was now weighed down by so much armour that they were easily disarmed and secured. "I gotta say, Wyvern," she remarked, "your powers can be—"

She cut herself off when the floor vibrated under her feet from four explosions; faint but distinct all the same. Taylor tilted her head and made a querying chirp, then looked at Vicky and Amy.

"I dunno," Amy said, picking up on the unspoken question. "Maybe something to do with the power loss?"

"One of them went down to the holding level!" shouted a trooper. "He might be trying to—"

Another series of explosions, somewhat louder, blew debris out of the open elevator doors; a sudden whoooosh echoed through the room, then faded away again.

At that moment, Hero strolled in through the opening where the main doors had been. "Well, that's done," he declared. "Did I—"

Vicky wasn't listening. Hurling herself forward, she flew into the opening to the elevator shaft and headed upward. Far above, more explosions echoed downward, then a sudden light cut into the elevator shaft. She powered upward, weathering a brief rain of debris, and burst out into sunlight.

Legend was already here, hovering over the building and looking around. "God damn it," he muttered.

"What the hell was that?" Vicky looked around as well, but could see no fleeing fugitive, airborne or otherwise.

"Not altogether sure." Legend rubbed his chin. "At a guess, whoever built those suits, but wearing a better one."

Vicky nodded. "Geonchugga. He would've been down there trying to free Inago. Do you think he managed it?"

Her phone rang; she pulled it out and put it on speaker. "I'm here. So's Legend. No bad guys in sight. What's up?"

Aunt Sarah's voice was more of a sigh than anything else. "I just went down to have a look at the holding level. Inago's down there, or what's left of him. He was busted out, then someone blew him apart."

"He's dead?" That didn't sound right to Vicky. "He can regenerate pretty good, can't he?"

"Not from this, he can't." From the sound of it, Aunt Sarah was shaking her head. "Not even Amy at her best could pull him back from this one."

"Wow. Damn." Vicky raised her eyebrows. "This is not gonna look good."

From the expression on Legend's face, he didn't disagree.

<><>​

Geonchugga

Flying in stealth mode was hard on his power reserves, but it was the only way he could hope to escape right now. As he flew, Ha-joon grieved his leader and wondered if there was even an ABB to go back to anymore.

If there is not, I will rebuild it, in his memory.

Of course, he would give them a suitably edited version of Inago's final moments. A sudden ambush, a valiant last stand, a treacherous attack. No matter what the PRT had to say, they would believe his version, and they would flock to his standard.

Martyrs to the cause, he reflected, were always useful.



End of Part Twenty-Eight
 
Which is weird, given that a lot of his ego-complex in canon appears to have stemmed from "I am a dragon" and "I am so mighty that I fought Leviathan toe-to-toe and the fight sank all of Kyushu", both of which could be argued might justify a certain... arrogance. Turning into a giant bug and generating swarms doesn't have quite the same... conceptual weight, I guess you could call it?
 
Turning into a giant bug and generating swarms doesn't have quite the same... conceptual weight, I guess you could call it?
Some posters on SB have been arguing that's why he was so paranoid and aggressive on the issue; he didn't really have the same conviction of his own power that Lung did. So Lung would have been arrogantly confident and not jumped immediately to assuming that his minion was trying to betray or humiliate him; after all if that's what they plan the mighty Lung will just smack them down anyway. I'm sure that if, for example Lung was freed from containment foam by tinker lubricant then slipped and fell he'd have been irritated, but I doubt he'd have jumped straight to assuming "they are trying to humiliate me". And certainly not "this man who went to great effort to rescue me is plotting against me for Reasons."

While Inago lacked that genuine (arrogant) confidence and was more concerned about putting up a facade of strength and afraid of betrayal. Sure he talked like he was confident, but his actions and responses were examples of paranoia. His attitude towards Geonchugga only make sense in that light. Given that all Geonchugga had to do to be rid of him was "nothing", that he could have just killed Inago right off if that was his goal, and that him trying to "humiliate" Inago when there was neither a point nor witnesses all scream paranoia rather than rational thought. Much less Lung-style arrogance.
 
It's almost like Inago had a personal reality distortion field as a secondary power...
 

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