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Sentinels of Earth Bet (Crossover fanfic)

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tehwonko
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Sentinels of Earth Bet (Crossover fanfic)

So, first things first, this is a crossover with Worm, which is... tonally unlike Sentinels of the Multiverse, to say the least. For the most part, I'll be trying to stay away from that tone here, but you should know that there are deaths here. Also, there are Neo Nazis. Most of them are among the deaths though. Take that as you will.

Secondly: I am a fool and forgot that these forums existed, let alone that I even had an account here, until I heard them mentioned again on The Letters Page. That's why you're getting the first three chapters all at once.

Thirdly: This was primarily written for the Worm nerds over on SpaceBattles, so let me know if you've got questions about that side of things. I'd link you to the Worm wiki, but it's terrible. The SpaceBattles folks don't know how lucky they are, what with being linked to the Sentinels wiki for their questions

Fourthly: This has spoilers for both Worm and Sentinels of the Multiverse, including OblivAeon. Read with that in mind

Fifth and finally: I own nothing here but the order of the words.

 

ISSUE 1: DAWN BREAKS

“Tell me about him.”

“There's not much to tell. He walked up to the front desk and asked to speak with you by name.”

Armsmaster turned from the display showing the interview room and it's lone occupant leaning back in his chair to Miss Militia standing beside him.

“So? I imagine dozens of people ask to speak with any one of us on a given day. What makes him special?”

“Aside from the golden tinkertech arm and the fact that he’s dressed like he fell out of a Zane Grey book?” Miss Militia shook her head. “I told you he asked for you by name. He asked to speak with Colin Wallis, not Armsmaster.”

“And since I’m not on record as working here, it means we’ve got a Thinker on our hands.”

“One who's willing to risk breaking the unwritten rules, too.”

“Okay, what do we know about him then? Do we think he has anything to do with Vista’s disappearance?”

“Hard to say. He gave his name as Jim Brooks, of which there are eight in Brockton Bay, none of whom match his description. Although, Officer Watkins, who was manning the desk when Mister Brooks came in, did mention unprompted that there was a Sheriff Jim Brooks in a place called Silver Gulch, New Mexico, who our man here is apparently a dead ringer for.”

“And why does this matter?”

“Honestly, I’m not sure it does. Watkins has always had a bit of a cowboy hobby. I had him go home to get the book this historical Brooks is mentioned in.”

“Hmm. Very well. Worst case he gets a long lunch.” Armsmaster sighed. “Nothing for it then. I’m going to talk to him. Keep the confoam ready.”

Miss Militia nodded as Colin left. On the monitor, she watched him enter the interview room.

“Mr. Brooks?” he asked the man slouched in the chair, “I’m Armsmaster, I have some questions for you.”

Brooks slid his feet off the table and sat up. “I’m sure you do, Colin,” he drawled as if he had all the time in the world, “This is the first time you've met me, after all, and you're no doubt wonderin’ how I come to know certain personal details about you and yours.”

“That would be a good place to start, yes.”

“Well the easy way involves me pullin’ proof from inside my arm here, and I'd like to make sure you don't spray me down with your fancy foam when I do.”

“Go ahead,” said Armsmaster, “But know that I am watching you very closely.”

“I'm sure you are.” Brooks made a complicated gesture with the fingers of his mechanical left arm and suddenly there was something between them. A small plastic card, which he handed to Armsmaster.

“Is this what I think it is?”

“If you check the embedded security hologram, you'll see it's genuine.”

“I am well familiar with all the security protocols on Protectorate ID cards, Mr. Brooks. As well as the fact that falsifying one is a federal offense.”

“Well it's a good thing you gave me this one yourself then, inn't it? I'm enactin’ the Beckett Protocols, and that there card is my authorization.”

The systems in Armsmaster's helmet popped a message into his HUD; the security scan on the card had come back. All green, with the exception that the issue date was January 2011. Six months in the future. A further notice indicated there were two video files in the card's internal data storage. Armsmaster set the first one to play and watched.

Brooks watched Armsmaster.

The video finished. Armsmaster turned to the camera on the ceiling and spoke to Miss Militia on the other side. “Turn off the cameras and delete the recordings. For the next hour this room is dark and under Master/Stranger lockdown.” A heavy bolt slid in place in the door and the red light showing the camera was recording went dark. Armsmaster turned back to Brooks. “So you're from the future. Why are you here?”

“To put it bluntly, Colin? Something big’s comin’. I can't tell you the specifics yet, Maria'll fill you in when she gets here, but it's big. Real big. Bigger than anything your world’s ever faced before. And there's something here, in this sheaf of universes, that makes it unbeatable. I aim to help make sure that never happens.”

“So why are you here then, and not in New York, talking to Legend?”

“Short answer is that Alexandria and her group have their own role in all this mess. Explaining that to her is what that second video on the card is for. 'Sides, the part I’m here to stop? The part that makes savin’ all of reality impossible instead of merely incredibly difficult? It starts here in Brockton Bay, and it starts with Dawn.”


Kaiser called them “rallies”. It sounded better than “two minutes hate”, not that many of the people in attendance would have gotten the reference. They usually started with a visiting speaker giving a short presentation on some topic or another. Today’s had been from a California billionaire about the studies he had paid for that showed certain races, coincidentally the lighter-skinned ones, were genetically suited to leadership and wealth. Most of the jargon went over the heads of the audience, but they had gotten the general gist of what the man was saying and had loved it.

After the guest speaker there was usually a short intermission to set the stage for Kaiser’s speech. Kaiser was setting that up himself, growing blades over the stage into an impressive façade. Today was the official announcement of their new cape, and things needed to look good for the cameras. The  rally was being broadcast live to the internet, showing the world the full power of Kaiser and his Empire.

The new cape, a Blaster Hookwolf had literally found lying in an alley, hadn’t given her name, instead insisting on “Dawn”, even if Kaiser’s suggestion of Aurorae seemed to fit better. Still, if Hookwolf was right about what she could do, and the day Hookwolf spent healing suggested he was, Dawn would more than make up for the recent loss of Purity. Acquiescing on a name was a small sacrifice to make to keep someone so powerful on his side.

A buzzer sounded, indicating that the intermission was over and the main event, Kaiser’s speech, was about to begin. He took his place on the throne he had made at the center of the stage, while the various capes of the E88 arrayed themselves behind him. The lights dimmed, and the stage curtain rose. Kaiser slowly stood and faced his audience.

“This country is sick,” he began, the crowd hanging on his words, “We used to be the the shining city on a hill. The ideal that all other countries could strive to. We were a beacon of prosperity, of industry, of innovation, and of goodness.”

Kaiser waited for the cheering to die down before he started again. “This is what we were. The greatest country on Earth. But we have been brought down, and brought low. Our country has become overrun by degenerates, by criminals, by the cosmopolitan, and the politically correct. The types of people who don’t deserve the kind of prosperity the country used to give to its citizens!

“‘But how,’ I hear you asking, ‘how can we help our country regain its greatness?’ The answer is simple. You start at home. Just as America was once the awe of the world, so too was Brockton Bay one of the centers of industry for her. Before the union strike blocked Lord’s Port and created the blight we call the Boat Graveyard, we were second only to New York City in shipping and industry. Now? Now we struggle to keep our roads smooth and our buildings clear of gang signs. Only the good people at Medhall, and other companies that offer jobs to those willing to work them, have saved our city from the fate that these… these deplorable people would wish for her.”

The crowd was cheering again. Kaiser motioned for silence. “Today is the Fourth of July. A day when we remember and celebrate our country throwing off the shackles of mediocrity! The day we stopped being a group of lesser colonies and became a great nation, set to lead the world! With that in mind, I come to you today with good news for the war to regain our city’s former glory! We in the Empire 88 have a new recruit to our cause!” he gestured behind him and a spotlight clicked on, illuminating his newest cape. “This is Dawn. I’ll leave her to speak for herself, but I will say she is one of the most powerful parahumans I’ve ever met. With her on our side, this city, and this country, of ours can be made great once more!”

Dawn took her cue and stepped up next to Kaiser. He stepped to the side to allow her access to the microphone, but she didn’t take it. Instead she surveyed the crowd for a moment, looking impressive in her red tunic and pants, the clothes she had been found in. After a few moments, she broke her silence, speaking in a high, pleasant voice that Kaiser was sure filled the entire room even without the microphone. No one who was there could avoid hearing what he said next.

“I am new to this world, and your Empire offered me kindness and information, and for that, I thank you. Your philosophy and mine are not dissimilar, except in one key area.”

“And what is that?” asked Kaiser, quietly enough that the microphone almost didn’t pick it up.

“You believe that everyone here today is superior because of an accident of melanin, while I know that those on this stage are superior because of their power.”

Kaiser was about to interrupt, to regain control of the stage, when Dawn spoke again. This time to the crowd. “All of you, bowing at the false altar of ‘racial purity’ make me sick. There is no racial purity. There are the powerful, and the powerless.”

She reached out her hand. There was a bright light and the sound of screams. When Kaiser could see again, he saw not a crowd hanging on his every word, but a sea of burned corpses, the only survivors crawling at the edges of the mass of the dead.

“If they had been among the powerful,” Dawn said to the few people who remained, “they would have been able to defend themselves and they would still be here now.” She turned to the assembled capes on the stage with her, all of whom were on their guard, ready to attack or defend as needed. “I offer you all a place with me, with the powerful. Will you take it?”

For a moment, no one moved. Then Kaiser raised his arm, and the blades attached to the front of the stage stretched out toward Dawn. She turned toward them, raised her hand, and released a blinding glow.

And the cameras went dead.


PRT Conference Room B, nicknamed “The Big Room” by those who worked in the building, was almost never used at capacity. Mostly this was because its capacity was theoretically greater than the number of people in the building at any given time.

Today it was standing room only.

Armsmaster had called the meeting, and marked it mandatory for all local PRT and Protectorate personnel, and like it or not, when the head of the Protectorate ENE said jump, most people had little choice but to ask “how high”. There had been a lot of grumbling from officers recalled from vacation or staffers just getting off shift. That stopped once the video finished playing.

“This video was broadcast over the internet 14 hours ago,” began Armsmaster, “What you just saw has been substantially cleaned up and improved from the original, which had developed significant spotting and image degradation due to the intense light emitted by this new Parahuman, Dawn, damaging the light sensor in the camera, as well as the camera itself.

“As you may have guessed, Dawn is the reason for this briefing today. Analysis of this video, as well as the corpses and other remains found at the site suggest a threat rating of at least Blaster 8. Further information from a trustworthy source suggests even more. At present Dawn is considered Blaster 9, firing light-based projectiles similar to Purity. Furthermore, she has low-level Breaker and Shaker abilities, as well as situational Master powers. A more detailed breakdown of these abilities will be issued within the day, but let it be known that Dawn is extremely powerful and, clearly, willing to kill based on her deranged ideology.

“I know we're all still on a higher patrol schedule due to Vista's unplanned absence, so keep this in mind: if you encounter Dawn, or any surviving parahumans of the former Empire 88, Do. Not. Engage. Alert Console and withdraw as safely as you can. That is all for now. Dismissed.”

Better informed, but more nervous than they had been before, the assembled staff of the combined PRT/Protectorate ENE slowly filed out of the room. For his part, Armsmaster was on his way to a different, much smaller conference room, where he had a much more difficult meeting.

“Armsmaster.”

“Alexandria, ma'am. Good to see you.”

“I'll be blunt. How much of a threat is this Dawn?”

“According to my source she's as powerful as the Butcher, as charismatic as Jack Slash, and capable of gaining a following of parahumans more powerful than the Teeth. It would not be an exaggeration to say she is one of the most dangerous individuals on this planet. It wouldn't be a stretch to call her a Class A threat on her own.”

“Is gaining this following part of her proposed Master rating?”

“No ma’am. Her power is apparently based around control of any sort of energy with a visible component. Specifically absorption and emission. The Master rating comes from the fact that, when she's absorbed enough energy of a certain wavelength, she can….” Armsmaster trailed off, uncertain.

“She can what, Armsmaster?”

“According to my source, she can… reanimate the dead.”

“Reanimate the dead.”

“As I understand it, she infuses a corpse with her energy and is able to puppet the body. However, this has only happened once as far as my source knows, and further information is sketchy, at best. For all we know, it could just be a side-effect of her healing capabilities.”

"Healing capabilities?"

"According to my source, yes, ma'am."

“And is this source of yours available for an interview? I would be very interested in hearing more about Dawn from a source more immediately familiar with her.”

“Unfortunately, ma’am, that's not possible right now.”

“Armsmaster, I'm one of the most trusted people in the entire Protectorate. I think I can be trusted with a confidential source.”

“It’s not that, ma’am. I’m under orders to not let you see them.”

“Whose orders?”

“Yours, ma’am. The Beckett Protocols are in effect.”

“Do you know how many criminals have tried using the Beckett Protocols as an excuse? Claiming their crimes were necessary to ‘set right what once went wrong’, and that we were dooming the future by arresting them?”

“Approximately 600 cases a year, ma’am. The difference here is that the protocols are actually being followed. This person came to us first, they came with proof of who they were, and they came with authorization from their head of the Protectorate to follow a very specific plan.”

“Which you are not privy to, given the very specific wording you’ve used.” Alexandria sighed. “Can I at least see this proof and authorization?”

“No, ma’am, I’ve been told you can’t, and situations like this call for as much infosec as possible, given the potential ramifications of time-travelling parahumans. But I can tell you that my informant, as well as all the materiel brought with them, have passed Master/Stranger containment. The one part that hasn’t is because I’m not authorized to view it.” Armsmaster pulled a USB stick from a slot on his armor and gave it to Alexandria. “Only you are, and only in ‘the most secure location you can access’.”

“You seem pretty sure all of this is on the level, Armsmaster. Why is that?”

“Two reasons. First, the amount of effort someone would have had to go through to successfully fake everything I’ve seen so far is so much that it would be easier to do almost literally anything else than trick people into thinking time travel is real. Second, a murderous psychopath of a parahuman supremacist has shown up in my city, and this time traveller is the only one who’s been able to tell me anything about her. I don’t actually care if they are from the future, so long as they help me keep this city alive. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to go do just that.”

Alexandria watched Armsmaster leave, then looked at the USB stick in her hand. She looked to the ceiling, and spoke to no one anyone could see.

“Get everyone together. We have a situation.”


Three people seated around a large wooden table, looking as if it had been carved from a single tree. Behind the table a large window looked into a swirling mass of colors. At the head of the table was a silver-haired Hispanic woman in a gold bodysuit and red overcoat. To her right, sat Alexandria with her helmet off. To her left, opposite Alexandria, was Armsmaster.

“Good evening,” said the unknown woman, a faint and unplaceable accent tinting her words, “I am Captain Maria Helena de Falcón. You already know Rebecca and Colin.

“If everything has gone well, and at this stage there is no reason to think differently, then the first time this message is played will be in a secure meeting room in Cauldron headquarters. To ease some of your more immediate concerns, I have asked Rebecca to embed the necessary security codes and protocols to show that this message is from six months from when you are watching this and that your Beckett Protocols are in effect with regards to the information in this message.”

“Which is to say,” said Alexandria from her seat next to Maria Helena, “That you are at a tipping point, and if you choose wrong, you will reach a position from which the survival of humankind, on any Earth, is impossible. In order to prevent this, it is absolutely vital that Dawn get sent to the Birdcage. I can't tell you why, just that if she doesn't go, the last, best hope to defeat Scion, and the one who comes after him, dies in fire and flame.”

“Beyond that one directive,” said Maria Helena, “You must all act naturally and react as normal, in all of your roles. This is why you are being told as little as you are; to minimize potential deviance in the timeline. The fewer variables, the easier this all is to plot. Things will get worse before they get better, but remember, Dawn must be sent to your Birdcage. Without this event, nothing will survive what comes next.”


“So what do we think?” asked Alexandria as the video finished playing. “All the necessary security protocols were in the file, all signed with my personal codes. If this is fake, then we need to worry about whoever made it, because they clearly know too much.”

“As opposed to worrying about not only Scion, but also 'the one who comes after him’?” asked Eidolon from across the table. “Because that sounds pretty worrying to me.”

“I'm not saying either option is good, but it is something to keep in mind,” said Doctor Mother. “What do we know about the person who brought the message?”

“Armsmaster is under uptime Beckett orders not to let me see him, but we've found out that his name is Jim Brooks, cape name of Chrono-Ranger. Artificial arm, but almost certainly has extensive cyberization throughout his body, given how he moves.”

“How much of a threat is he?” asked Number Man.

“Hard to say. As I said, he is essentially a tinkertech cyborg. And given that he seems to know Armsmaster in the future, there’s no telling what devices or equipment he may have.”

“So we're just accepting that time travel is real and that Brooks is from the future?”

“Grey Boy,” said Contessa from her end of the table, “Phir Sē, Clockblocker, Minute Hand. All have temporal manipulation abilities, who is to say there are not others?”

“Exactly,” said Alexandria, “that's why we wrote the Beckett Protocols in the first place, just in case this sort of thing happened. Given everything we've seen so far, I suggest we proceed under the Protocols.”

“And that brings us neatly to our second topic,” said Doctor Mother, “What do we know about Dawn?”

“Only what Brooks has told Armsmaster. There's no record of anyone matching her description or reported powerset. For all intents and purposes, she did not exist before last week.”

“Given her speech at Kaiser's rally, is it safe to say she's a dimensional transfer?”

“Probably, although that explanation raises questions of its own. Namely that she not only doesn't seem to be from Earth Bet, but also she's not from any universe Clairvoyant can access.”

“That isn't much of an issue on its own,” said Number Man. “There is no reason to assume the roughly ten to the seventieth universes accessible via the passengers are the only variants that exist. It's likely that Dawn somehow came from one of these other universes, then Brooks and Captain de Falcón followed.”

“Okay,” said Doctor Mother, “so we have a working theory as to who all these people are. What can we say about their plan? Contessa?”

“Getting Dawn into the Birdcage is simple enough,” Contessa said, “It only adds 267 steps to the plan, and most of them are minor adjustments.”

“And yet you sound apprehensive about doing it,” said Eidolon.

“If Dawn goes to the Birdcage, the timetable for Scion's turn and destruction of humanity moves to six months from now.”

“That's… unusually exact for you,” said Doctor Mother.

"I know, usually there is some variance in the possible timelines for Scion's attack. But now it seems fixed in place, as if nothing we do could affect it."

"And what happens if we ignore Captain de Falcón's message and leave Dawn be?”

Contessa didn't respond for some time. Eidolon was about to ask if she was alright when she jerked back from the table and fell to the floor, screaming.

Doctor Mother got to her first.

“Fortuna! Fortuna, what is it? What do you see?”

Eventually Contessa stopped screaming and started shaking instead. It was only because everyone else in the room was so quiet that they heard what she said next.

“It’s Coming. Darkness. Fire. The death of all that is.”

She took a deep shuddering breath and whispered one more word.

“OblivAeon.”


Picture the universe. Imagine, if you can, its breadth, its width, its height, and its duration. Hold in your mind a picture of all creation. That picture is everything that is, everything that was, and everything that will be.

It is not truly everything, though. For there is one axis along which the universe moves that you did not imagine.

Possibility.

For every left turn, there is a right. For every event, there is a different outcome. For every path taken, there is one that is not. Each of these differences on their own are small, but sometimes, and no one is quite sure how to tell when, these differences build up and something new is spawned. There is Disparation. There is another universe.

Take, then, all these possible disparate universes, all the possible worlds that never were yours, but are still just as real, and imagine them together.

This is the multiverse.

An infinite canvas of not only what was, is, and will be, but also of what wasn't, what should not be, and what may still be to come. As endless and varied gem, populated by uncountable people, each with their own lives, hopes, and dreams.

There are those who wish to play in this infinite realm. There are those who wish to preserve it. Some want to conquer it, or use it for their own glory. Still others want to improve it, to see it grow beyond itself. There is one, however, who wishes only to destroy it.

That one is OblivAeon.

OblivAeon, who cools the hearts of stars. OblivAeon, who causes realities to wind down and sputter out, devoid of energy and life. OblivAeon, who sends his agents to destroy and corrupt what they will, for no other reason than the sake of destruction itself.

OblivAeon looks into the infinite possibilities of the multiverse and sees the need to eliminate a certain potential threat in a keystone reality, and so arranges for this threat to be sent elsewhere, to another universe. A portal is opened, and this threat falls out of her own universe, and into another, setting into motion a chain of events that will cause her to be destroyed and beaten. And just to ensure this outcome, OblivAeon reaches into this second universe and seeks a being of power and destruction. One is found, and OblivAeon sets into motion a series of events to guarantee the ascension of this new agent, this Scion of himself, who will destroy all it surveys.

OblivAeon notices, but does not deem significant, that the portal he opened to dispose of the threat stays open slightly longer than it should have, and that someone from this second universe has fallen through it in the opposite direction of the threat. OblivAeon now looks across all of space, time, and possibility, and sees nothing in his way.

Picture, now, the multiverse. No longer resplendent with the infinite majesty of possibilities, but instead broken, burning, and dead.

This is now the only way things can end.

This is the future.

This is OblivAeon.


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ISSUE 2: STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND

If there was a word for falling, but sideways, Missy Biron, Vista, doesn't know it. Which is a shame, now she thinks of it, because it’s something her powers make trivial. Not that it was something she wants to to experience again, that is. She doesn't even want to be experiencing it now. One moment she was dropping into an alley behind Hookwolf, the next everything had gone… blue and she was falling sideways.

She doesn't even know how long she’s been falling; there was nothing she could use to mark the passage of time. Except... there. At the very edge of her power’s perceptions. There is something. Some sort of hole in space.

She reaches for it with her power and pulls herself toward it, feeling out the edges as she moves closer to it. Ahead of her, something comes into view. A ball with images flickering over its surface. Nothing Vista, Missy, can make out, but colorful movements and bright flashes of light, like a movie out of focus. She moves herself closer still and an image grows clearer on the sphere. A young woman with a shock of bright pink in her dark hair getting thrown into a pile of robots. She tries to stand, but collapses on a leg that won't bear her weight anymore.

At that, Vista’s, definitely Vista’s, not Missy’s, instincts kick in and she reaches for the woman. As her hand touches the sphere, suddenly Vista wasn't falling sideways anymore. Instead she falls

Out

Through

Up

Into

And then gravity took hold once more, and Vista just fell down.

As she regained consciousness, Missy looked around at the rubble surrounding her. The partially collapsed walls and sagging ceiling meant that whatever happened to this building, Missy, Vista, needed to get out before it finished collapsing.

A twist of Vista’s power widened a hole she normally couldn't have fit her finger through to five feet wide. She stepped through and saw a street in chaos. Whatever collapsed the building she was in hadn't stopped there. Most of this block was either falling down, or about to. There were fires burning, ambulance sirens wailing, and the shouts of first responders trying to keep as many people as they could alive.

Somewhere nearby someone cried for help, and Missy was Vista again. She wiped something sticky off her forehead, and began reaching into piles of what used to be buildings, bringing people out, and passing them off to firefighters and paramedics. The Wards had trained her for this sort of thing, hoping she’d never need to use it, knowing that she would.

Vista wasn't the only superhero helping here today. The girl with the pink in her hair was directing a dozen robots in various tasks, some opening buildings, others carrying wounded. An armored figure faced the flaming front of a store, held his hands up to it, and ice began to form, quelling the fire. And there, lifting a building off the street so an ambulance could get closer to the scene, was a man who Vista thought was Legend for a moment, before realizing she was mistaken. Although the feeling of calm inspiration this man exuded was just as strong as Legend’s, this man wasn't wearing a mask, and his costume was mostly white, with a symbol of a lantern displayed on its chest. Everyone seemed to be following his instructions.

Eventually, not long enough, there was no one left alive to rescue. Vista looked around and saw many of the other capes gathering around an upturned hot dog cart. She wiped another batch of sticky something off her face and joined them.

“I’ll save the speeches for later,” Not-Legend said as Vista approached, “But I’m proud of all of you right now. Dawn and her Citizens represented a threat not only to us and to our city, but to our entire way of life. Thanks to all of you, though, we’ve stopped her. Tachyon says that whatever was in that energy burst left no trace of Dawn, and when she vanished, her Citizens scattered, hoping to--”

Vista didn't hear the rest of what Not-Legend said, because it was then that the adrenaline wore off, and Vista finally realised what the sticky stuff she had been wiping from her face was.

I’m pretty sure my blood is supposed to be on the inside of my head.

And that's when she fainted.



The first thing Missy noticed when she woke up was that something was nudging her hand. When she noticed that, other things rushed to fill her mind. A steady beeping sound, something soft underneath her, a weight on her. She opened her eyes and saw a white ceiling.

Oh, a hospital. That makes sense, I guess.

She closed her eyes again and relaxed until a sudden thought struck her. Her hands flew up to her face and she breathed a sigh of relief when she felt her visor still there. Good, that meant her identity was still safe. On the other hand, that also meant she wasn’t in a Protectorate hospital; they would’ve taken the visor off, since they already knew who she was.

So good and bad then. Missy let her hands fall back to her sides and was surprised to hear one of them hit something that sounded like metal. She cracked one eye open and looked toward whatever it was.

Okay, that’s a dinosaur. A robot dinosaur. A pink robot dinosaur.

Missy stared at the chicken-sized robot through her half-open eye for a moment. For its part, the robot nudged its way under her arm and curled up there.

What the hell, I’ve probably seen weirder things.

Missy closed her eye and laid back down again. Now that she was awake there was no point in trying to go back to sleep, so instead she thought. Wherever she had landed wasn’t Brockton Bay, that much was clear. For one thing, none of the buildings she remembered had looked like any she recognised from back home, not to mention none of the capes she had seen were in any way familiar. So where was she then? Seattle had someone who made robots, but Missy was pretty sure that person was a middle-aged black man, not the early-twenties middle-eastern woman she had seen controlling the robots during the search and rescue. Besides which, Seattle didn’t have anyone with ice powers or who acted like Not-Legend.

Missy’s thoughts were interrupted when the door to her room opened with a hiss. Missy did her best sleep impression and listened carefully as the sound of footsteps came closer.

“Mister Chomps?” someone with a slight Middle-Eastern accent whispered. “Mister Chomps, are you-- Ah! There you are! What have I told you about sneaking into the medical wing? Come on, leave our visitor alone, she needs to sleep.”

Missy felt someone grab the robot under her arm and try to lift it up. The robot clawed at the bedsheets, snagging them, keeping whoever was trying to pick it up from doing so.

“Mister Chomps, let go right now or I’ll disassemble you. Don’t think I won’t.”

The robot let go of the sheets suddenly. So suddenly that whoever was trying to pick it up overbalanced and, Missy assumed, fell backward. Whatever happened, the robot ended up landing. Hard. Right on Missy’s face. Or it would have, if she hadn’t bent space just enough that it landed next to her instead.

“Oh, sparks!” the voice cried from the floor. “She’s already got a head injury, this isn’t gonna help. Dr. Stinson’s gonna be pissed.”

Enough was enough. Missy opened her eyes and sat up, picking the robot up as she did.

“It’s fine,” she said. “The robot missed me.”

“Really? That’s a relief.” A young woman jumped up from the floor. No, not just a young woman, the same one Missy had seen through the sphere before she fell into… wherever here was. The same one who had been directing robots in the rescue efforts.

“Anyway, I’m Devrah,” the woman said, “and you’ve met Mister Chomps already. He seems to like you.”

Indeed, the robot, Mister Chomps, had curled up in Missy’s arms and was making a soft purring noise.

“Oh, do you want it back?” asked Missy, holding the, admittedly cute, ball of robot dinosaur out.

“No, it’s fine. I can make another one if I have to.” Something seemed to occur to Devrah. “Wait! You’re awake! Let me go get Dr. Stinson real quick. You probably have some questions and she’s the only one in right now. Well, except for me. And Ryan, but he’s in his cryo-chamber and probably wouldn’t be able to answer any science questions you have. Wait right here. Mister Chomps, keep her company.”

Devrah ran out of the room, leaving Missy alone with the robot. Missy sat up and looked around. She was in a set of decent flannel pyjamas not a hospital gown, for which Missy was immediately grateful. As for the room itself aside from some equipment near the head of the bed that Missy assumed was Tinkertech and medical related, it was a fairly standard looking room, like one from any number of mid-range hotels. There was a small bag on a table across the room. A thought and twist of space brought it into arm's reach. Folded inside was Missy's Vista costume, cleaned and repaired of damage.

Missy was about to climb out of bed and explore the rest of the room when the door hissed open again. With a whoosh of air and a blur of motion, there was a tall, strawberry blonde woman in a lab coat standing in front of Missy's bed.

“Hello, Vista,” she said. “I'm Dr. Stinson, Tachyon of the Freedom Five, and unfortunately, I have some bad news for you.”

“Bad news?”

“I'll just be quick about it and say that you're in the wrong universe.”

“Okay, that makes sense, I guess. Is this Earth Aleph then? I didn't think there were that many capes here.”

“Oh, you’ve had contact with other universes?

“Well, not me personally, no. So I guess this isn’t Earth Aleph then?”

“No, it isn’t. We’ve never even heard of Earth Aleph here. Or any other Earths named with the Hebrew alphabet for that matter. All we know about your world is that English is a language there, and that it has an organization called the “Protectorate” that gives out ID cards.”

“It was my ID card you found this out from, wasn’t it?”

“It was, yes. You’ll find it in the bag along with your costume. That’s also how we learned your name. Well, your superhero identity, at least.”

“And luckily for you,” said Devrah as she came in through the open door, “It’s one that no one here on our Earth had taken. It’s always complicated when that happens.”

“So you’ve had this happen before?” asked Vista, sitting up, “Can you get me home?”

“Not right now,” said Dr. Stinson. “The other interactions with alternate timelines we’ve encountered have given us only the vaguest of ideas as to how we could send someone to one without extremely specific circumstances. We have some calls out, but there's not been anyone to replace F.I.L.T.E.R. since they went off on their own, so there's not much hope there. For now, I’m afraid you’re stuck with us.”

Vista slumped back into the bed.

“It’s not all bad,” said Devrah. “Like Dr. Stinson said, we’ve had things like this happen before. We’ll get you home as soon as we can. I guarantee it.”

“Right,” said Dr. Stinson, “And until then, you’re free to stay here with us at Freedom Tower. We’ll give you--” An alarm cut her off and she vanished from the room. A moment later she reappeared in a white tank top and leggings set with red circles on the sides.

“I’ve gotta go. Kraken off the coast of Maine again. Devrah, show our guest around, will you?”

And with another gust of air, Tachyon was gone again. Devrah sighed.

“Does this sort of thing happen often?” asked Missy.

“What the Kraken? No. Usually it stays around Atlantis but it’s been getting restless lately. I’m just bummed she didn’t even ask for my help.”

“You’re a superhero too?”

In answer, Devrah waved a hand at the robot still on Missy’s lap. It broke up into a cloud of parts, which floated to Devrah and reassembled into a small floating platform that zipped around her head.

“Unity, at your service,” said Devrah with a theatrical bow. “Mover of metals and maker of fine robots.”

Missy nodded appreciatively. “She probably didn’t ask you to come so you could keep an eye on me. You don’t know if I’m secretly an evil villain or something yet, after all.”

“That’s probably part of it, but we know you’re a good guy. After we knew you were from an alternate universe we called in Visionary. She did her weird psychic look into the future thing and didn’t see you turning on us, so we’re assuming the best from that. No, it’s more that Dr. Stinson has very specific view as to why I’m here and doesn't want to let me do anything more than that.”

“I know that feeling,” said Vista as she leaned back. “I’ve been on my team the longest of anyone else, and they won’t listen to anything I have to say just because I’m also the youngest. I hate it.”

“You’re not the only one who hates that feeling, trust me. Still! You need to get dressed. You can use your costume, or there are clothes in the closet. I need to give you the tour. And I think I know just where to start.”



Vista looked through the crumbling ceiling. Even though it was daytime, the moon was visible overhead. Too visible. It took up a good third of the sky at this point. Any closer and it would be too late. Already tidal waves were on their way to the city. It was taking everything Vista had to divert them away from the coast and more waves were on the way.

“Unity, don't we have anyone who can help with these waves? I'm at my limit here!”

“Ryan, sorry, Absolute Zero is on his way now!” Unity's voice crackled over the radio. “We're going to freeze the harbor!”

“What about the device? Holding back the waves won't do any good if the damn moon lands on us!”

“I'm working on it! It's not enough to just smash the thing, it has to be reprogrammed to put the moon back where it belongs. And that's hard to do with an entire Blade Battalion shooting at me!”

“What can I do to help?”

“Unless you can take out that mobile defense platform that's keeping my bots pinned down, just focus on the waves for now! Beating Blade here is no good if Megalopolis drowns!”

“I'll see what I can do.”

Vista looked around. She was on the top floor of Freedom Tower, with the ceiling falling apart above her and the wall of windows facing the ocean blown out. She could see the harbor from here, Baron Blade's flying defense platform floating above it, and she could see another wave on its way.

Vista reached out with her power to turn the wave aside when suddenly, the wave became an iceberg. Absolute Zero had reached the harbor then. The man's relationship to cold wasn't too dissimilar to Vista's relationship with space. What he wanted, cold did. Never mind that freezing that much water would normally be impossible.

The frozen wave was still moving though, and even if the concentrated impact of a solid mass of ice wouldn't be as bad as the dispersed impact of a wave, it would still do considerable damage. Vista made to turn it away, when she had an idea. With a thought, space reshaped itself and the iceberg began to move upward. Ignoring physics in favor of Vista, the iceberg fell away from the ocean, and straight into Baron Blade's defense platform. With a crack, the platform broke in two and began to fall. A gentle twist of space ensured both pieces landed on the now-frozen section of ocean, rather than any of the city.

“Defense platform is down,” said Vista into her radio. “You're clear, Unity.”

“Thanks! My bots have the battalion covered, so I just… need… to… There! The beam's reversed! The moon is on its way back to where it belongs! I think this calls for some--” The radio cut of with a burst of static. And something told Vista she had to move. Now.

With a step, Vista was on the ground outside Freedom Tower. She looked up to where she had been and saw an explosion tear the entire floor apart. From the fireball stepped a figure. It caught sight of Vista on the ground and stepped off the ruins of the tower, landing hard in front of her. As it stood, Vista realised it was a suit of power armor. Seven feet tall, with a sword attached to its right arm and a transparent red bubble in place of a head showing the man inside. Vista looked at him, scarred eye, pointed beard, and a sneer that would have done Kaiser proud.

“You must be Baron Blade,” she said as she looked for a way out of this. An angry Tinker in his power armor was not something Vista could fight on her own.

“I was hoping to find Legacy here, defending his precious city,” said Blade, an Eastern European accent tinting his words, “But if he is not here, then I am sure a hostage can guarantee his appearance. Young girl, how would you like to meet a superhero just before he dies?”

“No thanks, most of them are overrated.”

Vista ran. Each step covered a city block, but Baron Blade was right behind her, his power armor pushing him forward. Vista took a hard right that for her wasn't a turn at all just as a blast of energy took out the road behind her. Rubble pelted her and she could feel blood running down her arm where a particularly sharp piece had grazed her.

Well, two could play at that game. For just a moment behind Vista, south became down and a car fell toward Blade's head. The same trick she had used with the iceberg, but on a smaller scale. Vista didn't look back to see if it worked, the stomping footsteps behind her said it didn't, and just ran full speed ahead.

Three more turns and Vista arrived at the harbor, now an expanse of frozen water out to the horizon. Baron Blade was gaining on her and she needed backup. She spotted the armored figure of Absolute Zero standing on a dock, pulling his hands back from the frozen waves. Two steps and she was next to him.

“Blade's right behind me!” she wanted, out of breath. “And he's pissed!”

“Just what today needed,” murmured Absolute Zero to himself. “A showdown with an omnicidal maniac.”

A wall of ice intercepted another blast of energy from the power armor's hand. The ice crumbled and Baron Blade was there behind it. A blast of fire pushed Absolute Zero back and a swipe of Blade's sword sent Vista flying into a dune. Something cracked as she landed and pain shot up her leg. Probably broken. She wouldn't be leaving here any time soon. She could still help though.

Baron Blade unleashed another blast of fire at Absolute Zero, and he responded with a wave of cold. Blade dodged, but a twist of space brought the wave back on target and it hit full-force, encasing the armor's sword, and the arm it was attached to, in ice. A shout from the far side of the dock showed Unity had arrived. Metal twisted itself from around her and formed into a squadron of robot hornets, which flew straight for the mass of ice. As they impacted, they exploded, shattering the ice, and the armor with it. Another wave of ice immobilized Blade as three of Unity's dinosaurs climbed up him and started biting at the bubble that protected his face. He shouted and swiped at them, but his hand never quite went where he wanted it to. Once the robots cracked the bubble, it was all but over. Ice filled the inside of the power armor and Baron Blade slumped over, defeated. Metal pulled itself from nearby debris and formed itself into a group of stern-looking robots with heavy fists, ready to keep Blade from escaping.

A fanfare played and the landscape faded first into outlines, then into nothing. The pain vanished from Vista's leg. As she stood and made her way to Unity and Absolute Zero, the figure of Baron Blade faded away too. Once he was gone, the robots collapsed into piles of loose parts.

“You need to take a look at the speech settings, kid,” Absolute Zero, or Ryan, Missy supposed now, was saying to Unity. “Lord knows Blade likes the sound of his own voice, but that was a bit too far.”

“What do you mean?” asked Unity, Devrah. “It was perfect!”

“'Confound these wretched robots!’ isn't perfect. It's so hammy I'm surprised you're allowed to be in the same room as it.”

“Fine, you think of something better then. Hey Vista! So what'd you think of the training simulator?”

“It was great!” Missy beamed. “We don't have anything like this at home, and I'm only allowed to go out on what they call 'safe’ patrols. I never get to stretch my powers like that!”

“That was a good trick with the iceberg, kid,” said Ryan as he turned to leave. “You’re quick on your feet and a sharp thinker. You'll go far.”

“Wow,” said Devrah. “He must really like you. Ryan's never that positive about anything.”

“I didn't even know if the iceberg thing would work,” admitted Missy, “It just seemed like a good thing to try.”

“That's how a lot of good ideas get started. Still, let's head down to the cafeteria, Vista. You're probably hungry after all that.”

“Missy.”

“What?”

“If I'm gonna be here for a while, I'll need to start making friends,” said Missy as she took off her visor. “My name's Missy.”

“Well then, Missy. Let's get you some food.”

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ISSUE 3: DAY OF THE DRAGON

Lisa walked into the store. Not too fast, since that would arouse suspicion, but fast enough that the security guard she had seen heading in her direction probably would have lost her. Just in case, she looked out the store’s large front window to try and spot him in the early-morning crowd.

No one following. He must have gone past.

With a sigh of relief, Lisa turned back to the interior of the store. A middle-high-end boutique, the kind that didn’t put tags on things not because the wares were that expensive, but because they liked to pretend the wares were that expensive.

It works, more often than not.

Lisa quickly wrenched away from that thought. She didn’t want another migraine over useless information. That wouldn’t do anyone any good. She drifted her way to a wall display of leather jackets, all of them looking high-quality.

Three are counterfeit, two are stolen. The purchaser took product from the Empire Eighty-Eight before they collapsed and resells them here. Used to split the profits, now keeps it all for herself.

Another line of thought to avoid. Having powers was trickier than anyone had made it out to be, and Lisa was still getting a handle on hers. A few hours a week, max, before the headaches became too much. That was easy. The hard part was keeping her power from jumping on the first thing she saw and running with it. Most people had a train of thought. With her power, Lisa’s was supersonic.

The bell above the door rang. Lisa looked up from the jackets and saw a stocky-looking blond man and his, presumably, girlfriend walk in. She went off toward the dresses, he went to a chair by the wall. Lisa turned back to the jackets and idly picked one up. It looked nice enough, and at least this one was legally obtained.

There’s something in the pocket.

Sure enough, in the left hand pocket was a folded piece of paper. Lisa took it out, put the jacket back, and unfolded the paper.

Ms. Wilbourn,
The two people who just walked in are armed and here to force you into service under their boss. If you don’t like the sound of that, get out now. If you want to say thanks, I’ll be at the taco stand across from Fugly Bobs.
-Jim

Okay, that was spooky. Lisa looked at the man, sitting nonchalantly in his chair.

Dresses to his taste, not his girlfriend’s. Independent minded. Ex-Military probably. Special Forces. Looking casual, but is aware of the position of everyone in this room. Left handed, keeps his hand free to quickly access the gun holstered on his left hip. Paying more attention to me than a man with a girlfriend would be.

Okay, that was enough to be going on. Lisa started walking toward the door, brushing past the employee making her way to Lisa, probably to passive-aggressively get her to leave. In different circumstances Lisa would have made a little game of breaking the girl down and revealing her secrets, but things were getting unnerving. As she reached the door, she heard the man get up and start toward her.

Lisa bolted.

Three stores later, she realised that running flat out down the Boardwalk was making her look suspicious. The last thing she wanted was to draw the attention of the security guards, especially here. There was a foyer for one of the semi-public restrooms the Boardwalk management maintained for paying customers just ahead. The restroom itself was locked with a digital keypad; to get the combination you had to ask in one of the nearby stores. Or you could have the ability to instantly glean information from just a glance. Either way worked. As Lisa ducked into a stall, she noticed an envelope taped to the back of the door. Curious, she took it and opened it. Another letter.

Ms. Wilbourn,
It was a good idea to get out of direct view, but I’ll be honest here and tell you that you’re not being very subtle. Check in the tank for something a bit more inconspicuous, then wait 35 seconds after putting it on before heading out again. I’m still at the taco stand if you want to talk. Otherwise, have a nice day.
-Jim

Lisa stared at the note.

“Jim” has accurate knowledge of my actions before I take them. Precog? Would explain how he got the letters in place. If he’s a precog, would he have gone through all this trouble if he knew I wouldn’t meet him? What if I don’t meet him and just leave now? What if--

Lisa cut her power off there. Causality problems weren’t worth a headache. She carefully opened the tank of the toilet and found a sealed plastic bag with a sports bra, leggings, running shoes, and a few other things. She looked at them for a moment, the shrugged. At least they were cleaner than what she had now. Lisa put her old clothes into the bag and the bag back into the tank, counted quietly to 35, then stepped out of the bathroom.

A group of women, all wearing clothes similar to Lisa’s jogged past. Figuring there was safety in numbers, Lisa followed behind. A quick glance told her that neither Boardwalk Security nor suspicious and highly-trained agents had seen her, so she continued jogging slightly behind the group.

Two minutes later, she was bored. She knew everything about these women, and had barely needed her power to learn it. Jane was mad at Cathy for something about a book club, Cathy was sleeping with Cindy’s boyfriend. Tara was worried about her brother, recently out of the closet, and how he would be received at school. And Michelle was angry that her CS project, something about a virtual rubber duck, kept imploding. Was this how normal people lived? Lisa couldn’t stand it and ducked away the moment an opportunity presented itself, safety be damned.

“Why hello there, Miss Wilbourn.” drawled a voice from nearby. Lisa looked around, and immediately saw where she was. The taco stand across from Fugly Bobs.

Damn. Causality wins again.

“You must be Jim,” said Lisa as she turned around. The man she saw was maybe early-40s, with long, slicked-back brown hair, a long-sleeved button down shirt and… was that a bolo tie? “You dress like my grandpa.”

“I’ll assume that means your grandad was a man of exceptional taste then. Have a seat.” Jim gestured to an empty seat across the table from him with a gloved hand.

“Let’s get to the point,” said Lisa as she took the offered chair. “Why’d you help me out back there?”

“Is it too much to assume that I don’t want to see a young girl in indentured servitude to a supervillain?”

“Everyone’s got an angle. Give me time and I’ll figure yours out.”

“I’ll save you the trouble and tell you right now if you like.”

“Sure, why not?”

“Firstly, let me tell you that you’re free to go at any time. By now the snake of a man who wanted you isn't a threat anymore.”

“How do you know that?”

“Same way I'll know which jacket pocket and bathroom stall to leave my notes in.”

So he was a precog then. Except that even as she thought it, Lisa’s power started telling her that was wrong.

Dresses in old-style clothes because they’re what he’s used to. Gloves aren’t a fashion statement, they’re concealing something. Whirring and buzzing whenever his left arm moves. Left arm is artificial, gloves and sleeves conceal this. He’s relaxed, but has enough situational awareness to know where everyone around him is. Not where they will be. Not a precog, used the future tense. What then? Postcog? Closer, but still not right. Besides, the only way that works is if--

“You’re a time traveller.”

“Maria told me you were a smart one,” said Jim with a smile.

“So you’re from the future, and you want my help. Why?”

“Because, Miss Wilbourn, I can’t generally be in two places at once without arousin’ suspicion. I’d like you to lead a small group for me on somethin’ of an infiltration mission.”

“What’s the goal? Sabotage? Information gathering? Theft?”

“Not so much theft, no. You’ll know what you need to do when it comes time to do it.”

“Assuming I agree to help you, that is.”

“Assumin’ that, yes.”

Lisa thought for a moment. If Jim was telling the truth, and nothing she had suggested he wasn’t, then she had just had a very close call with an unknown supervillain. Living like she had been, pickpocketing random strangers and draining their bank accounts, was drawing the wrong sorts of attention. Clearly that couldn’t continue. Similarly, she just couldn’t see herself sitting in book club with Jane and Cathy or helping Michelle with her computers. Too boring. Lisa needed excitement.

“You know what?” Lisa grinned, fox-like. It felt good. Natural. “Fine. I’m in.”

Jim smiled too as he stood from his seat. “Good to hear. Now let’s introduce you to the Undersiders.”



Coil watched the screen that showed his men bringing in the fool who had dared interfere with his plans. Jim Brooks had caused quite a stir at the PRT of late, and his activation of the Beckett Protocols had closed a number of backdoors into their systems that Coil was sorely missing. That wasn’t the issue though. The issue was that Brooks was now directly interfering in Coil's… recruitment of the Wilbourn girl.

Or, at least, Brooks was present when fantastic coincidences caused Coil's men to be diverted away from their positions following the girl. Coil had split, and had his men remove Brooks from the Boardwalk, on that side of possibility, the coincidences stopped. Of course, Wilbourn had been lost in the confusion, but Coil was confident he would find her again. The girl was incapable of keeping her head down, after all.

A knock at Coil's office door signaled the arrival of Brooks and his escorts. Coil opened the door and watched carefully as his guards deposited Brooks in the chair in front of Coil's desk, then stepped back to a ready position near the back wall. Coil looked carefully at Brooks, and split.

 

“Glad I get to meet the local Moriarty,” said Brooks. “Of course, you're a far sight from him. For a start, he had the sense to take my arm.”

Coil was about to ask what Brooks meant, when the man's left arm bulged slightly, then narrowed, elongated, and bent at angles an arm shouldn't be able to bend at. The last thing Coil saw before he closed that side of his split was a metal hand heading straight for his face.

 

“Glad I get to meet the local--”

“Take his arm,” Coil told the guards. “The left one. It's artificial.”

“Huh,” said Brooks as the guards removed first his shirt, then his arm, which popped out of its socket easily. “Maybe there's hope for you yet. What can I do for you?”

Coil split.

 

“You can tell me why you're interfering with my plans.”

 

“You can tell me how you successfully convinced Armsmaster to activate the Beckett Protocols.”

 

“That's simple enough. I don't rightly like the idea of someone like you havin’ unfettered access to a young woman and no consequences. You can understand why, right?”

 

“T’ tell the truth, I just played messenger. I don't know what he put in that message to convince himself, 'cept that it worked.”

 

“Ah, a do-gooder. How lovely. It's been so long since Brockton Bay had an idealist. This will be refreshing.”

 

“You expect me to believe that? That you have no idea what it took?”

 

“Far from it, Calvert, just a pragmatist. 'Sides, I've got an appointment five minutes ago, so you won't have to deal with me much longer.”

 

“Tell you what, Calvert, you can ask Maria. She'll prob'ly know.”

 

A beep distracted Coil from his questions. He looked down to see Brooks’ mechanical arm flash once. Twice. Then a surge of light and Coil was somewhere else.

Coil blinked and looked around. Wherever he was was an eclectic mix of old and new. The walls, floor, and ceiling made him think of an old sailing ship, but the bars of energy across what could only be the exit reminded him of the exotic specimen containment area he had seen the one time he had visited Blasto's lab.

On the other side of the bars stood a woman. Grey hair and dark skin. She smiled.

“Welcome aboard, Thomas,” she said. “I apologise for the abruptness of your transfer, but we couldn't afford your interference.”

“Who are you?” Coil asked. “Where am I?”

“I have many names. You may call me La Comodora. As for where you are? You are in your new home for the foreseeable future. And trust me when I say that I can see a long way ahead.”



The indoor firing range in the headquarters of the Protectorate ENE was a marvel of  modern engineering. Specialised adaptive armor plates could absorb anything less than a 200 pound bomb, and what they couldn't stop, the triple-layered forcefields around the entire room would. Purpose-built spatial warpers allowed for simulated ranges of up to 12 kilometers, and a creative delivery system ensured that whatever weapon or ammo a person needed was only a push of a button away.

It was, in short, perfect for for when Hannah needed something besides paperwork to fill her sleepless nights. And there was a lot of paperwork these days. Crime of all sorts had spiked in the, now former, Empire 88’s territory in the days following Dawn’s unexpected killing of most of the leadership and capes. Even as the gang’s territory shrank with the ABB and even the Merchants taking advantage of the lack of parahuman response, non-cape members had tried desperately to hold on to what they used to have. Muggings, drug sales, even graffiti had all been up. Had been up. Then the Brockton Bay Police had found a tag of a different sort. Three blacked corpses in front of a half-finished piece of graffiti claiming the area as E88. The BBPD had ceded the crime to the PRT, once they determined the gang members had been killed the same way as the crowd at the Empire rally. They had been killed by Dawn.

Currently it was thought Dawn was hiding somewhere in the roughly ten block area still held by whatever the gang formerly known as the Empire 88 was called now, but the new patrol schedules set up to account for the suddenly open and relatively safe areas unclaimed by the other gangs (more paperwork there too) never went into that area for some reason. When Hannah had asked why, Armsmaster had just told her he had his reasons, and couldn’t say more.

As she walked through the sound-dampening field meant to keep the noise of weapon discharges out of the corridors, Hannah’s thoughts were interrupted by the sound of gunfire from inside the range. Something small calibre, probably hand-held. Maybe a PRT officer with a personal weapon? It wasn't unheard of for them to use this range instead of the one in the PRT building, but it was odd.

As she rounded the corner, Hannah saw that it wasn't a PRT officer at all. Instead it was Jim Brooks, Armsmaster's mysterious visitor who had been staying on the Rig for the past week. The team had been told he was operating on Thinker-derived information to try and capture Dawn, but there was something off about that story. For one thing, Brooks hadn't done anything yet but make plans preparing the PRT and Protectorate HQs for a seige. For another,  the book Officer Watkins had brought back not only mentioned an historical Jim Brooks, but also had a picture of him. And sure enough, the two Brooks’ were identical. The whole situation was, at best, extremely strange.

Hannah took a set of ear and eye protectors from a rack on the wall, put them on, and walked into the range proper. Brooks had a revolver of a make Hannah didn't recognise and a series of moving targets at the far end of the lane. He studied their movement for a moment, then, with a blur of noise and movement, all eight targets flashed red, dead center hits on all of them. Brooks holstered his gun and turned around.

“Impressive,” said Hannah as they both removed their ear covers.

“I try to stay sharp, Ma'am. Job like mine requires it.”

“I meant how you fired eight shots from a six shot pistol without reloading. I haven’t met anyone besides me who can do that.”

“I just reload later,” smiled Brooks. “It's a perk of my situation. Things do get int'restin when it comes time to empty the brass though, so I don't usually leave it too long.”

Hannah didn't quite know what to make of that, so instead stepped up to a booth next to Brooks. She set the lane for ten targets, all moving. She put her ear covers back on, checked that Brooks had done the same, and let her power shape itself into a revolver similar to Brooks’. A moment of studying the targets, then nine shots rang out. All ten targets flashed red with hits.

“That's some fine shootin’ Ma'am. I could’ve used someone with your skills against the Hayes boys back in the day.”

“In Silver Gulch?”

“Just so. Nice enough town, 'cept when some rough types rolled in, which was more often 'n not after the mine ran dry. I feel sorry for Pratt, havin’ to take over like that after I left. Still, the past's the past, and there’s only so much a body can do to change that.” Brooks turned to his booth controls and made some adjustments. A hologram of a man appeared at the far end of the lane. He was holding another person as a shield. Words flashed above them “HOSTAGE SITUATION. NON-LETHAL MUNITIONS ONLY”. A circle of pink light appeared next to Brooks. He reached into it and pulled out a small metal hand crossbow. He aimed downrange and fired. The bolt flew true and hit the hostage-taker in the arm. The man jerked back, then fainted. Both holograms faded away.

“What was in that dart?” asked Hannah. “A Tinker poison?”

“Nothin’ Tinker about anything I use. I gave a sample to Colin and he agreed. Just needs some delta radiation to make at full strength is all, and assumin’ all goes well that would've been discovered here in another few months.”

Hannah looked at the crossbow and felt a tugging at the back of her mind. She set her booth to replicate the hostage scenario and let her power loose. It struggled for a moment, twisting and reshaping itself, never quite solidifying until, with a snap, the green and black energy in her hand became a perfect replica of Brooks’ weapon. From there, things went smoothly. Aim, fire, watch the hostage taker collapse. Brooks just smiled, reached back into the pink light, and pulled out a long silver weapon that glowed blue at the top and tip.

“This is the Masadah,” he said as he sighted down the long barrel. “A curious bit of tech, reg'lar rech mind you, still none o’ that Tinker stuff, that measures the uptime temporal momentum of a situation and adjusts its output to match. The downside is that you never quite know how much you get for any given shot. Point it at the leader of an invading nation and you might not get anything, since it turns out he's just a figurehead and the real movin’ and shakin’s coming from somewhere else. But point it at a street brawl between kids and you could level the block 'cause one o’ them would've grown up to build a perpetual motion machine. You never know how a person's actions will change things, so I usually don't use this piece unless I know what's happenin’.”

Hannah's head was spinning at the thought, and her power crackled in her hands. “May I hold it?” she asked

“I'd love to let you,” said Brooks as he looked at the clock hanging on the back wall. “But I'm afraid we're both about to have things to do.” He put his weapons back into the pink light and walked out the door. “You might want to get ready to fight some fires.”

Hannah was about to ask him what he meant when the question died in her throat. The emergency alarms sounded. All hands.



Tonight was the night. Tonight Kenta would finally take the city from the last notable threat against his unquestioned rule. Tonight Kenta would fight Dawn. Tonight he would win.

Kenta knew relatively little about the new parahuman who had come from nowhere and killed most of the E88’s leadership. Most, not all. Hookwolf, Othala, and Stormtiger had all turned traitor to their former master to join with Dawn. They now formed the core of her group, although rumors swirled constantly that unaffiliated rouges and independent villains were slowly gathering under her banner. Most of what Kenta knew was that this Dawn had proven herself against ten parahumans at once and come out on top. But ten parahumans were nothing next to an Endbringer, and Kenta had proven himself equal to that challenge.

Kenta very pointedly did not think to himself that he was only equal to an Endbringer, not greater than one.

As Kenta and the group of his subordinates he had gathered approached the area Dawn controlled he turned to Lee, his second.

“Scout ahead. Dawn is mine, but you and the others may fight who you will.”

Lee nodded, then collapsed into a pile of dust. Kenta continued forward with his men.

After a few blocks Lee appeared back in front of Kenta. A brief exchange between the two and the group changed direction. North, closer to downtown. Closer to Protectorate patrols, but if that was where Dawn was hiding, that is where Kenta would go. Already the anticipation of a fight was causing Kenta to grow taller. Scales hadn’t yet begun sprouting from his back and chest, but those would come in time.

By the time Kenta led his group to the palatial apartment block Lee had told him was the enemy’s base of operations, he was seven feet tall and hot to the touch. Two people in costume stood at the front door to the apartments. When they saw Kenta and his men approach one of them, a young man in a flowing white shirt and simple mask ran inside as the other, a taller figure in black leathers, gestured and darkness filled the street.

Kenta flew forward in a rage. He could feel himself getting stronger as he burst through the doors of the apartment building. Shards of glass, metal, and wood cut into his skin, only for the skin to heal and close behind them. There was light inside the building, but the cape who had made the darkness outside was nowhere to be seen. Instead all Kenta saw was a mass of whirling blades heading for him. Hookwolf.

Kenta braced himself and roared. Hookwolf’s charge brought both of them out into the darkened street again. With a strain and a shout of effort, Kenta threw Hookwolf off himself and into the shadows. Another roar, and a gout of flame burst from Kenta’s… no, Lung’s mouth even as that mouth began to split and elongate. The flames burned away some of the darkness around Lung. As it flowed back into his patch of light, Lung saw a glint of metal coming towards him. Most of Hookwolf’s attack glanced off Lung’s scales, but one blade slipped between them and pierced deep. Another roar, this time of pain, and more of the darkness burned away.

Hookwolf withdrew the blade and was about to stab it back in when an explosion rocked his back. Oni Lee had finally gotten out of the darkness and been able to see Hookwolf. And what Oni Lee could see, Oni Lee could reach, and plant a bomb on.

Lung took to the air as Hookwolf fell from him. The blast had stunned him and probably not caused any lasting damage, but he wasn’t the reason Lung was here. Better to leave Dawn’s flunkies to his men. From this height, he could see that most of the darkness had dissipated by now, and his men were on their feet, storming the apartment building. As they reached the opening Lung had left, five figures stepped out. From the way they stood, they were probably capes. But Lung had brought nearly a hundred men with him, a half-dozen capes would have a hard time, no matter their powers.

Lung rose higher. He saw a flash of red above him, on the roof of the building, and he rose to meet it.

Most people, when confronted by Lung in his dragon form, cowered, or ran, or lashed out. Dawn did none of that. She just watched, unblinking, as Lung rose to her level, and when he reached her, she spoke calmly

“I have an offer for you. I know that as you are now you cannot speak, so I will say my piece and let you decide.

“My old world and this one are not so different. In both those who are gifted with abilities above and beyond what many would consider ‘normal’ are forced to kowtow to those without power simply because they were afraid of us. In both children are taken from their homes by unnamed agencies to be studied and experimented on.

“On my old world I alone said no. I led the Citizens of the Sun, the greatest force on the planet! We protected those like us, those with power, from the numbers and machinations of the frail old men afraid for their positions and unable to face the truth of the world. Afraid that they were obsolete.

“Now that I am here, I wish to rebuild my Citizens, and offer protection to those who need it. To you, though, Lung, Hero of Kyushu. To you I offer a position of power at my right hand. I offer you control over an army of parahumans, to take your vengeance upon those who have wronged you. All you have to do, is accept me as your ruler.”

Lung remembered his time in the Yangban’s custody. He remembered their claims of perfect equality. He also remembered his response to their offer.

Like then, Lung set the building on fire. He would have no master but himself, as he was the only master worth serving. Dawn had not understood that, and now she was burning, lighting up the night with her final cries of anguish.

Except that those weren’t cries of anguish, they were of laughter.

The fire around Dawn faded and died as she rose into the air, face to face with Lung. She shook her head sadly.

“Very well, if you will not join me, I cannot allow you to remain.” She held out her hand, and a blast of light hit Lung full in the face. He could feel the energy trying to burn him, but he would not burn. Most of the energy continued behind Lung and hit a building, which began to crumble and fall. Lung returned fire with a blast of flame that Dawn failed to be burned by. Instead she waved her hand and the fire flowed into her, causing her to glow even brighter.

“Your fire has an interesting quality to it,” Dawn said, “As if it’s not just flames, but something more besides. Whatever it is, it certainly is… invigorating.” Another wave of Dawn’s hand and a wave of coloured energy rained down on Lung, and on the melee beneath them. This time the energy hurt. Several of Lung’s scales were knocked loose, new ones regrowing even as the old ones fell.

Lung felt himself growing larger still, approaching the size he had reached the day he had come to Brockton Bay, and the local Protectorate had tried to arrest him. He had won then, and he would win now. A swing of his tail sent Dawn crashing through three buildings, each one beginning to burn in her wake. His power surged inside him as he roared again, sending flames into the sky, the pressure from the sound shattering windows, only for another blast of multicoloured light to knock into him, this time tearing at his wings. The damage had fixed itself before he had even dropped fifty feet, and he caught himself on the thermal bloom of the fires he and Dawn had started on the street below. Lung rose higher, among the clouds, until he could see the city laid out below him, a good portion of the downtown area now burning. He laughed to himself, an inhuman sound from his inhuman mouth. He had won again. Except…

From where she had landed in the wreckage of the upper levels of a tower, Dawn rose. A single golden spark amidst the orange and red inferno around her. Lung roared again, and unleashed his hottest flame. Hotter than mere fire could be, this was more like a stream of the corona of the sun itself. The clouds around Lung burned away, and turned instantly to steam. Nothing on earth could resist this flame.

Dawn was not from this earth. The fire again flowed into her and she shone like her namesake, lighting the sky around her like a midnight sun. And then, with a simple wave of her hand, she sent Lung’s fire back at him. Lung took it, and raged. He grew even larger, laughing again as the fire failed to burn him. Except that at that moment, his rage failed him.

Instead of the well of power his rage had given him, there was nothingness. A blank void where before there had been strength. Dawn’s fire washed over him and the metal of his scales heated and seared into him.

For the first time since his trigger, Lung burned. He flapped his wings, trying to stay aloft, but his form wouldn’t fly anymore. Instead he fell, and he burned. A shooting star to light the day that Dawn had brought. He writhed, screaming as he fell, his body now unwieldy and unresponsive and burning in pain and agony.

Lung screamed, and burned, and fell until, with a sickening crunch and thud, what was left of him only burned.



You know of the multiverse. You know it is the sum total of all possibilities and probabilities of all realities. You know it should grow unto infinity. But the multiverse does not exist in a vacuum. There is a place of more dimensions than you can comprehend where it rests, ever-growing. There is Ur-Space.

All time in Ur-Space is the same time. There is no past, no future. There is only what is. Those in Ur-Space watch all of a reality simultaneously. They watch the beginnings  and ends, and observe how one flows into the other through the natural course of events.

OblivAeon is not satisfied with this being the way of things. It takes too long and new realities spawn before old ones can die. In order to achieve his goal of Absolute Nothingness, OblivAeon takes direct action. At times this means empowering individuals to cause destruction for him, at other times, the action is of a different scale entirely.

OblivAeon looks to a stretch of possible worlds that are all but identical. In the normal course of things these would have collapsed into a single timeline long ago, it is only the power of an inhabitant of this sheaf of worldlines, an entity worming its way through the dimensions, that they have not. A closer look at the worlds in question shows that the only difference between them is that one planet, a variant of a keystone of many realities, is devoid of all life but for a shard of this Dimension Worm. Each instance of the planet bears a different shard.

It is a fact in our world that two objects cannot exist in the same place at the same time. So it is too in Ur-Space, where all time is the same time and location is a measure of one's will. OblivAeon’s will is more powerful than any mere universal law. These worlds are so similar that it takes only the smallest push to cause two to overlap and destroy each other; the shards of the Dimension Worm either erased or returned whence they came. OblivAeon does not care which. There is a stretch of worlds ahead of him. OblivAeon sets himself to his purpose.

liarliar
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Wow, this is intense! We’re already seeing some huge divergences from the original timeline - I can’t wait to see where it’s going next! Looks like it will take a lot to deal with Dawn, though...

tehwonko
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liarliar wrote:

Wow, this is intense! We’re already seeing some huge divergences from the original timeline - I can’t wait to see where it’s going next! Looks like it will take a lot to deal with Dawn, though...

I mean, where it's going is OblivAeon, it'll just take some time to get there. Where it's going next? Vista needs a taste of home, but Rook City is as close to Brockton Bay as she's likely to find. 

 

As for dealing with Dawn, think back to the first time you played against her, and your team of four heroes ended up with three KOed and Haka down to single-digit HP before you end up losing anyway because Citizens Hammer, Anvil, and Spring all came out on the same turn. That's kind of the tone I'm going for with her

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ISSUE 4: BETWEEN THE HAMMER AND THE ANVIL

 
“Missy, we need to talk.”

Missy looked up from the computer built into the desk of her borrowed room in Freedom Tower to see Devrah leaning against the doorframe. “What about?”

“My lab was the size of a closet this morning.”

“Oh, sorry.” Missy grinned sheepishly and rubbed the back of her head in embarrassment. “You come in late and the tours through the tower make it hard to use my power in the more public areas. Your lab usually doesn't have any people in it, so it's easy to stretch and compress. I guess I just… left it small. It should be back to normal now.”

“Normally I'd say it's fine, but this is the third time this week. Is everything okay?”

“Yeah, it's just… I'm feeling a bit cooped up. This is a big building, but it's not really enough to stretch out in, y'know?”

"Well then, I have good news for you.”

“Please tell me it’s anything but sitting here reading archives,” Vista said as she stood from the desk and started pacing across the room. “I mean, they’re interesting, but I don’t think reading about other people being superheroes is helping me feel less bottled in.”

“It is most assuredly not reading archives. We just got a call from Harpy, she’s with Dark Watch, and she said that she and Nightmist are working on some sort of big transportation spell, and someone from an alternate reality could be just what they need to work it out!”

“Nightmist…” Missy thought back to what she had read about the major capes in this reality. “She’s the mage in Rook City? We’ve got someone back home who claims to be a wizard too. No one believes him though.”

“Wait,” said Devrah. “You don’t believe in magic either? You and Dr. Stinson would get along great.”

“Why would I believe in magic? We know where powers come from back home, and being a wizard has nothing to do with it.”

“Do you disbelieve in magic enough that you don’t want to see Nightmist?”

“If it gets me out of this building, I’ll pretend she’s from Narnia.”

“Great, pack a bag then. We’re going to meet Aslan.”
 



“You know,” said Missy, looking around, “When you said we were going to Rook City, I wasn’t really expecting it to be like this.”

“Oh?” asked Devrah. “What were you expecting?”

“I don’t know, don’t you people have a jet or something? Anything but the public monorail to the airport.”

“We do have a jet, but even if Ryan and Lieutenant Vance hadn’t taken it to check on the old Citizens of the Sun complex after their attack, I can’t fly it. So instead we’re taking the CEO of Montgomery Industries up on her very generous offer to let us join her on her private plane.”

“I don’t know, it seems suspicious,” frowned Missy. “The timing, I mean. We need to get to Rook City, and it just so happens that some rich lady is going there and offers us a ride?”

“Not everyone is secretly an evil mastermind, Missy,” said Devrah. “Ms. Montgomery has done this sort of thing for us before. I think she just likes to help.”

“If you say so. I'm still waiting for the other shoe to drop, though. It's been two weeks since I landed here and nothing's happened.”

“That's a good thing. It means no one is trying to kill each other.”

“I know, but…” Missy sighed and looked around the otherwise empty car. “You remember Progeny? Big silver guy, wrecked a bunch of cities? I read about him in the Freedom Tower archives. He's one of the biggest fights the Freedom Five have had in recent memory.”

“Yeah,” said Devrah, shuddering at the thought. “I was there. So was basically everyone else, at one point or another. We almost didn't win. Dr. Stinson even broke her back when Progeny threw her into a building.”

Missy looked Devrah straight in the eye. “Where I come from, something like Progeny attacks every three months.”

Devrah didn't, couldn't, say anything.

“Or that serial killer, Spite,” said Missy. “Apparently he died a few years ago, but we've got a group of up to nine people just as bad, wandering the country killing, or worse, anyone who tries to stop them.”

“Okay,” said Devrah. “If things are really that bad, then that answers a few questions some of us had about why a 13 year old was so good at combat.”

“The bad guys are only part of it,” sighed Vista. “You have a Mars base and contact with alien civilisations, we have a monster in orbit who destroys most of what we send up. You beat back a homicidal AI, we've walled off whole towns to keep a machine army from spreading too fast. You're right, I'm not supposed to see combat, but my city has a literal dragon, superpowered druggies and actual Nazis. Combat is unavoidable.”

Devrah thought for a moment. “If things are that bad on your Earth, are you sure you want to go back?”

Missy’s response was interrupted by the entire train shaking.

“What was that?” Missy asked, looking around.

“Normally I’d say it’s nothing,” said Devrah, “Just a rough patch of track from when Baron Blade had his bombing spree a few years back.”

“Normally?” asked Missy as the train rumbled again.

“Yeah. I’m reconsidering though, based on the fact the back of the train is on fire.”

“You could’ve led with that,” grumbled Missy. “Get me a mask.”

“A mask?”

“Yeah, I don’t have a public identity here, so I need a mask.”

“Fair enough.” The frame of the seat in front of them distorted and shaped itself into a simple metal domino mask. More pieces floated out of a light fixture and assembled themselves into a pair of earpieces. “Take a radio. I’ll head to the back, try and control the fire. You head up front, make sure the track is alright. We’ll let each other know what we find.”

Vista took the mask and earpiece and fit them into place. “Any idea who it’s likely to be?”

“Too many to list,” said Unity as she ran to the door at the back of the car. “Now go make sure we’re not about to crash!”

By the time Vista reached the small compartment at the front of the train, alarms were blaring. The engineer was on the radio shouting and flipping switches, and outside the window, about half a mile away and closing fast, stood a man.

“Unity, there's a guy on the track. Tall, long hair, beard, carrying a hammer and a shield. Who is he?”

“Sparks! That's Citizen Anvil! He's one of the top enforcers of the Citizens of the Sun! Keep an eye out for a bald dude, that's his partner, Citizen Hammer. He'll the one who started the fires back here.”

“Okay, that's great. Why is Anvil waiting to get run over?”

Unity was quiet for a moment. When she spoke there was urgency in her voice.

“He's going to crash the train! He has forcefields and his shield is unbreakable, if he sets it up right it could derail the whole thing!”

Outside the window, Citizen Anvil was adjusting his stance, readying for the impact that was about to come. Vista looked to the engineer next to her.

“Can we stop before we hit him?”

“At our speed? No way! It'd take at least a mile!”

Vista looked out the window and considered her options. She couldn't make the train go around Anvil, but he wasn't ready yet. Vista turned back to the engineer.

“Speed us up.”

“What? Are you insane?”

Instead of answering, Vista grabbed the microphone used for internal announcements, toggled it on, and spoke.

“Everyone, hold on and brace for impact!”

A count of two, one more than was probably safe, to let the passengers prepare, and the distance between the train and Citizen Anvil shrank from a thousand feet to nothing in the blink of an eye. A flash of gold, the sound of breaking glass, and the train stopped. Vista flew through the remains of the windshield, and as she passed over Anvil, lying on the track with his leg at a strange angle, she had just enough time to smirk to herself before impact.
 



When she opened her eyes again, the first thing Vista noticed was that she hurt. Everywhere. Then she had a brief moment of panic until her body remembered how to breathe and she realised that hurt too. She got up and turned to the train, with a massive dent where it had impacted Citizen Anvil. Not the cleanest takedown in Vista's career, certainly, but not bad given the circumstances.

Alright, what comes next? Vista thought to herself. Probably need to check on any passengers and help Unity with the fire.

With a step Vista was on top of the train. Her power told her that, aside from one person near the front of the train, the engineer, Vista suspected, everyone else was near the back, about two cars ahead of where the fire still burned.

A bloom of heat and light reduced that distance to one car between the passengers and the fire, and Vista hurried as much as she could, wincing with each step. She dropped down to the car entrance and opened the door to find about 30 people, mostly uninjured crawling out from piles of what looked like impromptu crash pods. The hot pink streaks on the sides spoke of Unity's power at work. She had probably made these in the limited time she had between Vista's announcement and the train hitting Anvil. One of the passengers saw Vista standing at the door, or more accurately, saw Vista's mask.

“Hey!” they shouted. “Are you a superhero? What's going on?”

Vista sighed to herself and put on her best PR smile.

“Someone left something on the track. Usually not an issue, but it caused a small thermal problem this time, so we need you all to evacuate the train now. Just as a precaution, you understand.”

That seemed to mollify most of the passengers, and the ones it didn't at least had the good grace to keep quiet about it. A pair of inflatable evacuation slides were deployed from the emergency exit doors, and people began filing out fairly quickly. Vista shortened the distance for some of the more injured people, but most of the passengers were able to get to the ground with no issues.

As the last passenger dropped down the slide, Vista turned to the back of the car just as a gout of flame blasted it open and a body came flying through it. Vista realised with horror that the body was Unity. A quick check showed she was still breathing, but badly burned. She coughed and looked up at Vista.

“I called for backup,” Unity wheezed. “Wraith is closest. She'll be here in seven minutes.”

Another fireball came through the door at the back of the train, and a man in an orange visor walked through the flames. He looked around the car, and saw Vista.

“Ah, there you are!” he said with a smile that Vista didn't like the look of. “We've been looking for you, kid. You need to pay for what you did.”

“Sorry, I'm new here,” said Vista as she put herself between the man and Unity. “You must be Citizen Hammer. Hi. I'm Vista. What am I supposed to have done?”

“You took away our leader!” shouted Hammer. “You thought you could extinguish the Dawn, but now you'll feel it burn!

Citizen Hammer snapped his fingers and the seats around Vista burst into flame. The grin on Hammer's face seemed to grow in the firelight. Vista backed away, keeping the heat and flames from her and Unity by expanding the space between them and the fire.

“If it's all the same to you,” said Vista. “I'd rather not. I already took care of your partner, you can't be much harder.”

Hammer just kept smiling. “And how did you take out Citizen Anvil? Many better than you have tried and failed, little girl.”

Vista shrugged. “Training. He was asking for it, really, standing on the tracks like that. I'm not sure--” A flash of golden light lit the car, and pure instinct had Vista ducking and creating a buffer of distorted space around her just as a hammer swung through where she had just been. She looked up and saw Anvil behind her. Bruised and favoring one leg, but still very much combat-ready.

“Maybe you need to train harder then!” laughed Citizen Hammer. “Not that you'll have much chance to once we take you back to the Citizens of the Sun for your punishment!”

Vista knew when she was outclassed. If she and Unity were fresh and uninjured, they could stall Hammer and Anvil until help arrived, maybe even win. As things were now, with Unity down and Vista still feeling the results of being flung out the front of the train, Vista decided to exercise the better part of valor.

A small twist and a jump and Vista and Unity were down the inflatable evacuation slide.

“A ‘small thermal problem’?” asked one of the passengers still gathered around the bottom of the slide as Vista picked herself up. She glanced back up to the train, and to the inferno consuming the back half of it.

“So I exaggerated,” Vista said. “Would you rather still be up there?” Before they could answer Vista handed them Unity. “Keep her safe, help will be here soon.”

One step later, Vista was on top of the train again, banging on the roof.

“Come on you goons, you're here for me, come and get me!”

Another flash of gold light and Hammer and Anvil were on top of the train with Vista. Hammer snapped his fingers and a jet of fire raced toward Vista's face. She ducked just in time to miss Anvil bursting from the fire and swinging his hammer. She didn't duck in time to miss the shield though. It connected and Vista flew fifteen feet down the train.

Okay, so he teleports too. That would've been good to know.

Vista stood and winced. Something inside her that should have stayed still moved.

Probably fine. After all, it's still inside, that's where blood belongs.

Vista dodged and space twisted just as another hammer strike and burst of fire came toward her. This wasn't tenable, but Vista didn't want to know what Hammer and Anvil would do to the civilians below if she weren’t able to distract them.

“Alright, big guy,” she said through clenched teeth. “Let's see how far you can go at once.”

A twist of space and a step later, the train was a thousand feet away. A flash of gold and Hammer and Anvil were in front of her again. Another twist, another step. Two miles away now. Another flash of gold and another blast of flame. Every step took them further from the train, and the civilians and Unity. Every step took Vista further from help. Every step drained Vista just that much more

But Citizen Anvil was getting slower too. His teleports were arriving later and later. Not by too much, but but the time Vista guessed she was about 50 miles from the train, Hammer and Anvil was a full thirty seconds behind her. If she could last just a bit longer, she would have a chance to hide before her pursuers arrived. Her opportunity came even sooner than that though. A twist and step brought Vista to the edge of a swamp. There were enough living things here that Vista couldn't go as far with each step. She looked around for a moment as she took a breath and winced in pain again. If she turned around now, Vista probably couldn't get back in communicator range before she collapsed, but with only a bit of luck, Hammer and Anvil were at their limit.

Vista's thoughts were interrupted with a distant flash of gold. She saw Hammer and Anvil appear about two hundred feet away, then Anvil collapsed. Vista didn’t wait around to see what happened next. She ran into the swamp.
 


 
By the time Missy felt safe enough to stop running, night had fallen. The moon was full, which kept her from stumbling too much on protruding roots or getting caught up in hanging vines, but it was still dark enough that her run had been more of a stagger. She would have stopped entirely and waited for daybreak, but something told her that with her injuries that would be a bad idea.

So instead Missy walked. When she could she used her power to go around a particularly deep puddle, or to level some ground, but for the most part she went from one tree to another, resting against the trunks for a few moments when she got tired, which was more and more often now.

In this distance, Missy noticed a flickering orange glow in the distance. A fire. Was it Hammer and Anvil again? Maybe. But also maybe not. Even on Earth Bet there were people who lived in dumb places for dumb reasons, why shouldn't the same be true here?

Figuring it was worth this risk, Missy slowly made her way toward the firelight. She squeaked in surprise and fell over as a large raven flew squawking out of a tree and into her chest.

Great, she thought. Now I'm injured and wet.

As she pulled herself out of the puddle she had landed in, Missy caught sight of a figure in the tree above her. She made to back away slowly, one never knew how a person who chose to live in a swamp would react to strangers after all, when the figure moved, then dropped out of the tree, landing silently in front of Missy.

Missy took stock of the figure in front of her. Tall, woman, muscles where there weren't close-fitting dark clothes, and guns. Lots of guns. There were at least two pistols on her hips and a shotgun slung over her back, and she was carrying something Missy remembered Miss Militia calling a "Barrett M82 long range sniper rifle, run if you ever see one of these". Yeah, this woman was probably the crazy survivalist who lived in the swamp.

The woman looked over Missy in turn. Whatever she thought, she didn’t let it show on her face. After a long moment of the two staring at each other, the woman finally spoke.

“You’re Vista?”

“I--” Missy stammered. “How did you know?”

“Unity said you might end up in this direction. She didn’t say why, of course, but in her defense, she sounded pretty beat up.” The woman turned back to the tree she had dropped out of, and started climbing. “Come on. You’ll be safer up here once we get started.”

“Started with what?” Missy did what she could to make the climb easier for herself, but she still winced any time she had to raise her left arm above her shoulder. She thought she hid it well though.

“Harpy says the local Cult of Gloom has been gearing up for a major ritual. Probably trying to bring their god here into the real world again.”

“Again?”

The woman ignored Missy,settled into a crook in a branch, and touched her ear. “Harpy, I’ve found our visitor. Yeah, the one Unity told us about. No, she’s safe. Yes she’s here with me, and yes that means she’s safe. Or she will be if you do your job at least.”

“Wait, you’re with Dark Watch?” Missy asked.

“Kid, I lead Dark Watch,” the woman said as she sighted down the scope on her sniper rifle. Missy noticed it was in the direction of the firelight in the middle distance. She reached into a pocket strapped to her thigh and handed something to Missy. “You know how to spot?”

“You must be Expatriette then!” Missy said as she tried to remember who else was on Dark Watch.

“The one and only. Do you know how to spot?” She waggled the thing in her hand at Missy.

Missy took the thing, a pair of binoculars. “Not really, no.”

“That’s fine. Just keep an eye out for anyone heading this way then. I’ll be busy.”

Missy turned the binoculars toward the firelight too and adjusted the focus. Between twenty and thirty people in purple robes were gently swaying back and forth in a large clearing in the swamp. Missy was too far away to hear anything, but she gave even odds that they were chanting. One person facing the group, probably the leader, gesticulated wildly.

“In position,” said Expatriette from beside Missy. “Setback, Fixer, you’re on in three. Two. Go.” As she said the last word, Expatriette pulled the trigger. The sound of the gunshot was a lot quieter than Missy would have thought, given Miss Militia’s many and frequent lectures on firearm safety. Maybe Expatriette had some sort of sound suppressor. As she wondered about that, Missy watched through the binoculars as the leader dropped to the ground as electricity arced off of him into the crowd. Two men ran into the clearing for opposite sides. One of them, a black man with a bandana tied over his eyes, Missy remembered him being called Mister Fixer, started throwing cultists left and right. The other man, white and heavily muscled, Setback, if Missy was remembering right, missed a punch and overbalanced, fell to the ground and neatly ended up under the flight path of one of the cultists thrown by the other man. The cultist hit two of his fellows who were winding up to kick their downed opponent, and all three went down in a tangle of limbs and purple robes.

The fight itself lasted maybe thirty seconds from Expatriette’s opening gunshot to the last cultist going down. The two men had made quick work of the cultists, aided by support fire from Expatriette. The two of them had begun tying the cultists up when the leader shakily rose to his feet. Missy was about to say something, but Expatriette spoke first.

“Fixer! The leader’s getting up. Stop him!”

Mister Fixer jumped toward the cultist, but it was too late. From out of his robe, the man pulled a pouch, and emptied small bones into a circle around him. As Mister Fixer reached the edge of that circle, he stopped dead with a flash of blue, as if he had hit an invisible wall, and crumpled to the ground.

“Harpy,” said Expatriette as she fired at the cultist. Just like Mister Fixer, the bullet stopped in midair with a blue flash and fell to the ground. “They’ve got a magus. Send in the birds.”

Before Missy could think to ask what that mean, more birds than she could count dove into the clearing. They swarmed around the man in the circle of bones, but they couldn’t penetrate the invisible barrier any more than Mister Fixer or Expatriette.

The constant flashes of blue from birds impacting continued for just a few seconds before they were overpowered by a much brighter flash of gold. A very familiar flash of gold.

“Crap,” said Missy and Expatriette at the exact same time. “They found me.”

“What do you mean they found you?” asked Missy. “They’ve been following me all day! They think I evaporated their boss or something.”

“They’ve been after me ever since I ran away from dear old mom and her superpower cult. Wait, are you the one who got rid of Dawn? I’d buy you a drink if you weren’t twelve.”

“Thirteen,” mumbled Missy. “And I just fell through a hole in space! I don’t know what happened to this Dawn lady! These guys still want to kidnap and torture me for it, though!”

“Yeah, that fits Hammer and Anvil pretty well. Still, we know how to fight them. You’ll be fine.”

Missy looked through the binoculars again just as Citizen Hammer incinerated about three hundred birds at once. The man in the circle of bones had begun gesticulating again, but Missy had no idea why. Setback ran toward Hammer, readying a blow, but Citizen Anvil moved between them and took it instead, then twisted to the right to avoid a kick from Mister Fixer.

Behind the cultist, a green portal opened. The cultist stopped moving, and turned to face it. A shape began to form in the chaotic forms inside. An inhuman skull, all sharp teeth and horns. It began to laugh, and Missy could hear it, even at the distance she was. It was a laughter that spoke of nothing but despair for anyone who heard it. Missy hadn’t believed in magic before this, but now she had no choice. Whatever it was inside the portal, Missy knew that if it came out, everyone on this planet would die.

And that’s when Setback was thrown to the ground and slid into the circle of bones, knocking them everywhere. The circle flashed blue one last time, and in that brief moment, Mister Fixer grabbed Citizen Hammer, and threw him into the cultist, knocking them both into the portal, which began to shrink. Citizen Anvil looked from the portal to Mister Fixer, and if looks could kill, Fixer would be dead. Then Anvil ran and jumped into the portal after his partner. A moment after that, the portal winked closed and the only sound in the clearing was the sound of flying birds.

“Come on,” said Expatriette, clearly not wanting to think about what those three would face on the other side of that portal any more than Missy did, “Let’s get out of here.”

liarliar
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I love Setback so much. And Bad Influence Expat is delightful too! :D

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ISSUE 5: THE ELEVENTH HOUR

 

Rebecca Costa-Brown was an incredibly busy woman, even if you only took her public life into account. As Chief Director of the United States Parahuman Response Teams (an inaccurate title, as the PRT had spread to Canada a few years after its founding, and talks were underway about expanding to protect Mexico and Central America as well), hers was the duty of explaining to the world at large, and North America in particular, that parahumans were perfectly safe and ordinary members of society, and the unfortunate actions of those who had chosen to use their talents for less than civic-minded purposes were outliers, and should not be counted. In her second, secret, role as Alexandria, one of the most powerful parahumans overseen by the PRT, it was her job to enforce that statement. In her third, and most secret, role as a member of Cauldron, the covert group that had tasked itself with saving the world from Scion, the source of parahuman powers, and eventual destroyer of the planet, she knew that not only were her other jobs at best fronts, but also that it was now only a matter of time before none of it mattered any more.

The report lying open on her desk was intended only for the Chief Director of the PRT, but it was Rebecca’s third role, member of Cauldron, that found it most concerning. Across the world, parahumans had begun losing their powers. Only about ten a day on average, so even if no new parahumans triggered, at this rate it would still take about fifty years for there to be no parahumans left on the planet. But that wasn’t the disturbing part. Cauldron had performed numerous experiments to determine the nature of parahuman abilities, and they all agreed on one thing: once a person had powers, they had powers for life. A prahuman’s connection to the piece of Scion that gave them their power was permanent and irrevocable.

Until now.

Most of the people affected by the phenomenon were unharmed by the loss of their powers. Cases like Lung in Brockton Bay or Inque in Detroit, where a cape was in a biologically untenable form when their powers vanished, were rare, but spectacular enough that the footage was still getting air time on major networks more than a week later. Rebecca was preparing a press conference to give the official PRT opinion on the matter when there was a knock at her door.

“Just a moment,” she called as she swept her desk for anything classified. Her assistant could be trusted with a lot, but there was no point in taking risks where they didn't need to be taken. Satisfied that no national secrets were currently in sight, she turned back to the door. “Come in.”

The door opened and Rebecca's assistant bustled in with a sheaf of files and a large cup of coffee. Of the two, Rebecca only needed the files, but the coffee helped sell her role as an overworked bureaucrat. The truth of the matter was, thanks to her powers, Rebecca remembered everything and rarely needed sleep. Because of that, the ficus in her office here at the PRT was one of the most caffeinated plants in the DC Metro area.

“What have you got for me today, Sam?” Rebecca asked as she took the cup.

“Not much, Ma'am,” said Sam. “The budget committee wants a revision based on the guidelines in the first file. The second is the information for your presidential briefing, and the third is the list of screened questions for the press conference this afternoon.”

“Excellent, Sam, good work, as always.”

“Thank you, Ma'am.”

“Sam?”

“Yes, Ma’am?”

“I notice you have a fourth document with you.”

“Yes, Ma’am, I’m not entirely sure what this one is. It’s here, so it made it through Master/Stranger screening, but it’s sealed and marked Eyes Only.”

“Well let’s have it, and I’ll let you know if it’s dangerous.” said Rebecca as she took the envelope. She opened it and read the single piece of paper inside.

“Ma’am? Is it dangerous?” asked Sam.

“Incredibly,” sighed Rebecca. “Delay the press conference. I have an unexpected meeting to get to.”


Brockton Bay College was an old school, and a proud one. Originally founded in 1863 as a Jesuit seminary, it had expanded both its campus and its remit in the nearly 150 years since its founding to include, among other things, a well-respected school of science and engineering, and a literature program that had produced two nobel laureates. In the years since the shipping industry left and the city started its slow decline, the college had been a guaranteed source of new residents for the area, and as such it received more tax money than a school of its size would normally be expected to. This extra money, combined with its proximity to other, more prestigious schools with lower acceptance rates, made Brockton Bay College a solid second choice for students across the country, all of whom brought even more money to the school.

All of these reasons taken together explained why Lecture Hall C, in the Dr. Steve Kirby Building for the Study of the Higher Arts, boasted some of the most comfortable seats Jim Brooks had ever sat in.

“Colin, sit down, please. You’re makin’ me tired pacin’ like that.”

“I'll sit down when I want to, Brooks,” Armsmaster said as he checked his armor. “You still haven't told me why I'm here instead of in my lab.”

“Two reasons. First, 'cause I've got an errand to run while we're here and time is gettin’ tight enough that I have to start scheduling more efficiently. Second, because the Beckett Protocols require a Protectorate minder with me any time I meet with government personnel, so as to avoid undue corruption of the timeline.”

“And how am I supposed to know what counts as 'undue’?”

“I may not know exactly what was in that message you sent to yourself, but it was enough that six seconds of it convinced you I'm tellin’ the truth. You may not trust me, but you trust yourself. Do what you told you to do.”

“Fine,” Armsmaster grunted, “who are we meeting with then?”

“That would be me.”

“Oh, Alexandria,” said Jim to the woman floating through the door. “I could have sworn I sent the meetin’ request to Chief Director Costa-Brown. Are you here as the witness? 'Cause I already brought Colin for that.”

“No, Mr. Brooks, I’m here in her stead. Chief Director Costa-Brown felt that--”

“Ma'am,” said Colin, “In the interest of full disclosure and getting the meeting done with so I can get back to my job, I should say that I have received trustworthy information about your various identities and roles.”

“From?”

“From myself, Ma'am. It was part of the message that convinced me to enact the Beckett Protocols.”

Alexandria sighed. “I suppose that explains why you were at the table in my message. You and I need to have a talk after this.”

“Yes, Ma'am, we do. But know that I understand what you at Cauldron did, and why. You learned of an existential threat, and have been dealing with it in the most efficient way you have access to.”

“Speakin’ of,” drawled Jim from his chair, “How is Fortuna doin’? She told me things weren't easy ‘round now, didn't really elaborate though.”

Alexandria looked Jim over with a stare that told exactly how much she approved of his attitude toward the end of her world, then sighed again.

“Her paths are… tainted, for lack of a better word,” she said. “Ever since she looked past the blind spot Scion is leaving in January she…”

“She saw him, didn't she?” Jim's voice went dark.

“Saw who?” asked Armsmaster.

“OblivAeon.” The word hung in the air like a cloud.

“That is a dumb name,” said Armsmaster. “It sounds like something out of a bad pulp novel.”

“You're not wrong,” replied Jim with a grin. “I'll let you bring it up with him after he's done destroying everything. I'm sure he'll be willin’ to workshop it with you.”

“How is this relevant, Mr. Brooks?” asked Alexandria.

“Well, you both know 'bout Scion and what he'll do, but Scion'll do it out of blind rage and despair, and he'll only do it to this planet and a few close neighbours. OblivAeon though… OblivAeon is out to destroy everything and everyone that does, has, or will exist, and he's doin’ it with a plan. Hell, he's pro'ly the reason folks're losin’ their powers. Seein’ him though? Knowin’ what's comin’? It's no wonder Fortuna's like she is. But I'm gettin’ ahead of myself.”

Jim stood from his chair and walked to the light switch. He turned it off, and after a few moments a light began to glow from his artificial arm. Armsmaster and Alexandria watched as the light took form and flowed into a shape that neither of them could describe. Part branching lines, part spider web, part climbing vine, the whole thing flowed into and around itself in a way that the eye could never quite follow clearly.

“This is a simplified section of a map of timelines from your local branch of the multiverse,” said Jim. “Everything from when Scion and his partner first caught sight of you here,” a red mote lit up in the bottom left of the diagram, where there was only one strand, “through to a hundred years from now.” The mote traced itself along the branching strands up and to the right.

“What's this area here?” asked Alexandria, gesturing to a region where many of the strands vanished or frayed away.

“That's the time between 2011 and 2013,” said Jim, “there're a lot of events 'round that time that could lead to the end of the world, usually thanks to Scion.”

“But there are timelines that come out the other end of that, we survive. We beat Scion.”

“That you did,” said Jim. “But things have changed. This is what things used to look like. Here's a more up to date map.”

The image vanished, and a new figure took its place. It was broadly the same, strands twisting around themselves, bending away into impossible directions, then veering back to join the whole. The main difference between the two maps was that while the first one reached across the entire room, this one stopped after no more than five feet, the strands abruptly stopping at the exact same point.

“What happens here?” asked Armsmaster. “Why does everything end all at once?”

“That's this comin’ January, when Scion gets a power boost and kills everything he can reach. Three guesses who gives him the power.”

“OblivAeon,” whispered Alexandria.

“Just so. But there is one more thing to show you here.” The map zoomed in on the section where the strands stopped. As it did, Armsmaster and Alexandria got the impression that they didn't so much end, more that they were burning. Each of these was a world that ended in flame, each of these was a world where they failed. Except for one. This that didn't end in fire. Instead it faded away, losing coherence until it stopped being visible about two inches past the others.

“What happens in this one?” asked Alexandria.

“That is the sole timeline where you beat Scion,” explained Jim. “And it fades away like that because startin’ about a day after you beat Scion, OblivAeon shows up.”

“And you can't see past him,” said Armsmaster. “Because he's destroying whole timelines you can't go to the future to map how they developed; there's no future to go to.”

“Exactly so, Colin. You learn that from yourself?”

“He was very thorough.”

“I can imagine. So, trace this timeline back and what do you see?” The strand began to glow red. Armsmaster and Alexandria followed it back until they found where it split off from the main group. There were a lot of other timelines that ended in fire at about the same point.

“What happens here?” asked Alexandria.

“That’s the day Dawn breaks out of the Birdcage,” said Jim. "And that brings us to the point of this here meetin’. In order for Dawn to break out--”

“We need to put her in,” said Alexandria. “I can’t allow this. If we know Dawn is going to lead a breakout of the most dangerous parahumans on the planet, I can’t let that happen.”

“Rebecca,” said Jim. “I’m here to save this entire universe from ceasin’ to ever have existed, just so there’s the slightest sliver of a chance that OblivAeon can be beaten. This ain’t the first timeline I’ve saved, and if I fail it won’t be the first one I’ve seen end. And while I ain’t proud of some of the things I’ve had to do in this job, you can bet your hat that I’d do it again. With luck, I’ll even be able to face up for what I’ve done. ‘Sides, think about what you’ve been doing for the past twenty or so years, then tell me again that one prison break ain’t worth the entire multiverse.”

Alexandria was silent for a moment. “Okay, you’ve made your point. What do we do?”

Jim nodded, then switched the hologram to a map and list. “I’ve already laid some groundwork, but there's some things I need you to do before next Thursday.”

The meeting began in earnest.


“Tell me something, Brooks.” said Armsmaster as they waited under a tree in one of the many common green spaces on campus. The meeting with Alexandria had ended twenty minutes ago. She had promised what help she could, but with an Endbringer attack expected in the next week or so, there was only so much she could promise.

“What’d you like to know?” asked Jim as he squinted into the distance, holding his hand up to shade his eyes.

“Why are you here?”

“Because I need a new hat after all that nonsense on Mars, so I commissioned a promisn’ young student here to make me one. We’re waitin’ for her to get out of class now.”

“That’s not what I meant. I meant why are you here on Earth Bet?”

“How d’you mean?”

“I don’t pretend we’re perfect, and with the resources you apparently have access to, surely there are other worlds with more and better heroes to take to your fight.”

“I mean, you’re not entirely wrong there, and honestly? That’s part of what Maria’s out doin’. As for why you folks though…” Jim sighed to himself and looked into the sky. “Before I started in on this business of savin’ the multiverse, I was somethin’ of a bounty hunter. I’d be given a target, some critter or monster that'd end up killin’ everything if it weren't stopped. I'd go back in time, shoot the varmint dead, then go back, knowin’ I'd stopped another timeline like the Wasteland from gainin’ prominence.

“You folks've been dealt a shitty hand. You drew the attention of somethin' much bigger than you, somethin’ that'll kill your world sure as look at it, and yet you're still figtin’. You're still workin’ to make things better. There's potential here, Armsmaster, and I'll be damned if I see it go to waste.”

“Hmm,” Armsmaster grunted. “And this plan of yours will work?”

“You've seen the stuff, Armsmaster, you know it works. My bottleneck was that I only had enough to weaken Dawn, not put her in a coma. But with Alexandria and the full weight of Cauldron and Dragon makin’ it, we'll be good to go once the first shipment comes in.”

“One more question.”

“Shoot.”

“Does giving us the knowledge of how to make this neurotoxin from the future count as 'undue corruption of the timeline’?”

Jim laughed and his eyes snapped back down to ground level. “Ah, and I do believe that's Ms. Farooq with my new hat. C'mon, Armsmaster, time to save the world.”


A week after he saw Jim Brooks pick up his new hat from a very confused young woman, Armsmaster looked into his log recorder and thought about what he should say. He considered everything that had happened to him and his city lately, the open warfare in the streets, and the fantastic coincidences that had lined up just right to ensure that Citizen Dawn was taken down and seamlessly placed in the Birdcage. He thought of what he had told himself in a message from the future. None of it could have happened by chance. He took a deep breath and activated the recorder.

“Colin, the first thing you need to know is that the man in front of you, Jim Brooks, is telling you the truth, but not all of it. I still don’t know all of why he’s here, the reason he’s given me can’t be the only one he has, but Brooks has a plan. I can’t tell you everything either, but I can tell you the broad strokes. However, it is imperative that you do not act on this knowledge in such a way as to change events until after Dawn is dealt with. Anything you do puts your future, my present, at risk.”

He paused and gathered himself for the next part.

“The event that has come to be known as the Battle of Brockton Bay began on 29 July, 2010 at 1:37 AM. A small strike force consisting of Citizens Shade, Volatile, Adept, and Pure infiltrated Bridge Generator Station Alpha--”


You know of Ur-Space now, of the timeless place where universes are born, grow, and die. But universes are not the only things there. Ur-Space is visited by many beings, such as the agents of F.I.L.T.E.R., to make their operational bases; or the Time Pirate, chasing herself through realities, preparing for The End. Other beings have adapted to live here, such as the Varusiodian Terminarch and her Endlings, fleeing their doom, if only for a while.

But there is one other kind of being to live in Ur-Space. There are the Singular Entities.

Each one as old as the primal idea they embody, a Singular Entity is unique in all of time, space, and possibility. Each is a force of nature, guiding their domain throughout the twists and turns of the multiverse. Each is untouchable by those not like themselves.

And so it comes to pass that Oblivion, the Entity of Destruction lures and traps Aeon, the Entity of Preservation in a lower universe, and does as his nature dictates. The remains of Aeon are absorbed by Oblivion, and a new being is formed thereby. OblivAeon.

The other Singular Entities see this, and begin to fear. One, Faultless, the Entity of Order, confronts OblivAeon and his corruption of the natural way of things, directly, but OblivAeon is more powerful than Oblivion was, and Faultless is corrupted, forced to serve OblivAeon's will. The first Scion.

Other Singular Entities take a more circuitous route, setting into motion chains of events and circumstance that will not bear out until the exact moment they are needed. Wellspring, the Entity of Progress finds particular success planting seeds in family trees, each generation progressing that much further than the previous. His greatest achievements in this regard is the line of Legacies, greatest heroes of their world, but this is far from the only seed he plants.

One such seed is planted in a small mindless creature on an overcrowded planet and then promptly ignored. For its part, that small seed of power allowed the creature to jump across Ur-Space to nearby alternate worlds, where there was no competition for food. The creature reproduced, passing its ability and the seed for new progress to its offspring. Thus are the Dimension Worms born.

And, in uncountable billions of years, when the Dimension Worms have begun seeding themselves across whole planets at once, giving the inhabitants of those worlds abilities far above their peers in aid of the Worm's reproduction, Wellspring looks at the army he has created, each member endowed with the smallest spark of his power, and hopes against all hope that it will be enough.

In another small corner of this cornerless space sits a being not native to Ur-Space, but also not here of his own will either. He is here as punishment. The name you are most likely to know him by is Voss, and while the nature of this place means he has been here forever, before he was here, he was the leader of an interstellar empire that conquered all it encountered, and corrupted all it conquered. It was a good life, and he relished the battle and the bloodshed. He reveled in his power, both his personal powers, as well as the strength of his militaries.

Until he came to a small unremarkable planet called Earth.

Again and again his fleets invaded that cursed planet, again and again so-called “heroes”, sentinels who protected that world, had beaten them back. Even when Voss himself, with his great army and even greater personal power, lead the battle, Earth somehow prevailed.

It was one of these invasions that Voss lead, the last invasion that Voss lead, that one of the sentinels of Earth used her cursed magics to banish him here, to nowhere and nowhen. Nothing has changed for Voss since he arrived, and again, he has always been here. Nothing can change for Voss. It is debatable whether he can even experience change. It is the way of things.

Something changes.

OblivAeon pauses in his destruction of barren alternate Earths to approach Voss and make himself known. Not with anything as base as words, OblivAeon has no need of those. His intention is enough. His intention is that Voss serve him as a Scion, as a being of supreme power. His intention is that Voss return to the Earth that bested him and prepare the way for OblivAeon’s Final Destructions.

Voss disagrees. Strenuously.

Voss, for all his ability and power, is mortal. OblivAeon is an entity Singular in all of time, space, and possibility. He has existed since nearly the beginning of time, and the number of entities older than him can be counted on one hand. He exists on a conceptual level above and beyond what is merely “real” and anything not of him or those like him can hope to destroy or even harm him.

Voss’ opening salvo breaks OblivAeon’s skin. Six small, unremarkable pieces of the Singular Entity spin off into the space between spaces, and eventually land in a nearby universe, where the small pieces of OblivAeon’s power that remains in them radically transforms those who find them.

But that is a different story.

The fight between Voss and OblivAeon continues for some time, such as time is counted here. The battle lasts an eternity and an instant until OblivAeon tires of the farce and reaches into Voss’ very self and begins to change what is there such that Voss will simply have always served OblivAeon’s will.

“No.” Voss’ voice is cracked with long disuse, or maybe it has never been used before. “I will not be yours.”

OblivAeon makes it known that if Voss will not be his servant, then Voss will not Be.

“I am Rainek Kel’voss, leader of the Nyxian Scourges, Grand Warlord of the Thorathian Empire, conqueror of all I survey. I bow to no one and to nothing. If the alternative to servitude is death, then that is what I will conquer next.”

Voss brings his hand, crackling with raw energy and force to his head, and releases all that he holds.

It is the nature of Ur-Space that there is no time. With no time, nothing can change. Voss caused change, and OblivAeon looks at the place where Voss is not and has never been. It is unfortunate that Voss would not be one of OblivAeon’s Scions, but there are alternatives, and OblivAeon makes his way to where one waits, destroying along the way.

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So, background. I wrote this and posted it originally back on April 1st, for absolutely no reason whatsoever, and then completely failed to post it here. Sorry about that, or you're welcome, depending on how much y'all enjoy it. Without further ado I present

 

Guise and The Scholar in: BEST SIDESTORY EVER!

 

“Hey, hey, John, look at this!”
 
“What is it this time, Joseph, another 'limited issue'?” John Rhodes, the Scholar sighed. He was well used to his companion's… eccentricities by now. Joseph, Guise, had stopped claiming the two of them were comic book characters as often as he used to, and John took that to mean that maybe his lessons were starting to take root.
 
“Better than that! Someone's started writing a fanfic!” Guise's face twisted into a toothy grin that should have been too wide for it, let alone visible through what John thought was a full face mask, but sometimes feared was Guise's actual face.
 
“A… dare I ask what that means?”
 
“It means we're popular enough to be in one of the first, let me see here, 37 fanfics on NotTheirArchive!” Guise looked up from his phone, which he hadn't had a moment ago, and John knew he wouldn't have a moment from now.
 
“Again, which means…?”
 
“This could be our ticket off this planet!”
 
“I've told you before, there's nothing wrong with Dok'Thorath--”
 
“Except for the weirdly inconsistent number of suns!”
 
“Yes, except for that--”
 
“And the literally endless civil war!”
 
“If we can help, then we go where we're needed. I've said this before.”
 
“Yeah, but sometimes a guy wants a banana, y'know?” Guise looked around for a moment, peering at a sheaf of papers he had pulled from nowhere. “Hey! What's the deal?”
 
“What do you mean this time, Joseph?”
 
“Not you, John, you! The one writing this!”
 
Me?
 
“Yeah! You! What's up with this outline? It's a mess! Half these scenes can't even happen anymore, and the other half are out of order!”
 
I mean… things changed from the initial draft, that's just how things go sometimes.
 
“And what about this update schedule? It's sort of once a month, but also sometimes longer! Are you just writing this part to pad out the time before you have to write another half-baked action scene again?”
 
I don't know what you're talking about. I have things I need to do, and this whole thing is frankly not worth losing my job over.
 
“Uh huh, sure. Let's pretend I believe you. How are you going to deal with this twist in Issue 6? What you have here will kill her!”
 
I don't have to justify myself to you.
 
“Hey, there's no lewd stuff in here!” Guise tossed the papers over his shoulder, crossed his arms, and stared at the sky. “What gives! Fanfic means lewds!”
 
Look, just because your mind is stuck in the last century doesn't mean the rest of us are too.
 
“That's a load of bullroar and you know it!” Guise turned to his companion. “What’d’ya say, John, you down for upping the age rating?”
 
“Joseph, I have no idea what you're talking about, so no.”
 
“Trust me, if you could see this outline, you'd do anything you could to improve it. And hey! What gives, calling this a sidestory? I should be a main character! I have my own card in the mission deck! I'm Guise, and I'm powered by a Singular Entity! You can't stop me!”
 
Yes I can.
 
“Oh, really? How?”
 
Like this.
 
THE END

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“Welcome to Rook City! Number one city in the world for violent crime, drug crime, and really any other type of crime. To the east, you’ll see our scenic river! Don’t mind that it’s glowing, that’s just because of Pike Industrial Complex, the number one legal employer in the city, and the number one cause of radioactive mutations and non-crime-related deaths!”

“Impossible,” said Missy as Setback finished his introduction to the city he and his team called home, “You’ve found a city worse than Brockton Bay.”

“You flatter us, really,” said Expatriette with a smile, “Pete hasn’t even gotten to the part about the giant rat monster in the sewers.”

“Ah, Honey, don’t ruin the big surprise,” moaned Setback.

“You’re kidding about that, right?” asked Missy as she peered closer at the city in the distance. “There’s no rat monster, is there?”

“Just stay out of the sewers, kid,” laughed Expatriette. “Now get back in the van, Faye’s waiting at the Manor for us.”

“I still can't believe that your superhero team travels around in a van older than I am.”

“Yeah, well, not all of us can afford private jets or have government funding. Now get in."

Missy sighed and winced a little as she climbed into the back seat of Expatriette's van and laid back. She couldn't actually sleep because either the roads around here were terrible, or Expatriette was deliberately hitting every pothole she could. After maybe twenty minutes of bumps and swerves, the van pulled to a stop in what looked like an old parking garage.

“Now, before you say anything,” said Setback as he stepped out from the front passenger seat, “This isn't the Manor, this is just where we're unexpectedly parking the van due to… mechanical issues,”

“Hmm, typical,” grunted Mister Fixer as he walked toward a door that seemed to lead deeper into the building. "Probably blew the suspension. Again."

“Don't worry about him,” said Harpy as she headed off to the same door. “He's… he's been through a lot.”

Missy gingerly climbed out of the van to follow everyone else, only to stop short as Expatriette blocked her way.

"When were you planning on telling us about your ribs?" Expatriette asked.

“What do you mean?”

“Kid, I still have one eye left, I’m not blind. Trust me when I say I know what busted ribs look like. How’d it happen?”

“Probably when I was running from Hammer and Anvil,” Missy sighed. “I took a shield to the… everything at one point.”

“Hmm, with luck they’re just bruised, but better to play things safe here.” Expatriette turned to Setback. “Pete, go tell Faye we’ll be a bit late, we need to go see Illya.”

“Sure thing,” said Setback as he leaned in to kiss Expatriette’s cheek. “Be safe.”

“You too,” Expatriette smiled. Once Setback walked through the door after the others, she turned back to Missy. “Alright, kid, the van’s broken so we’ll have to do this the hard way. You up for a hike, or you want to risk a cab?”

They decided on a cab, mostly because Missy was wincing every five steps and doing a bad job of hiding it. It took three cabs before one actually stopped for them, and another two after that before Expatriette decided the driver probably wasn’t going to kill or kidnap them. Twenty minutes of pothole-ridden streets later they stepped out in front of a decaying strip mall with crumbling façades and only a few businesses seemingly still open..

“A bakery?” asked Missy as she deciphered the fading sign below the glowing neon “OPEN” in the window she and Expatriette were standing in front of.

“Best polvorones de canele this side of the continent,” said Expatriette, “But that’s not why we’re here. Come on.” She held the door open and gestured for Missy to go in.

As dull as the outside of the building was, the inside was astounding. Talavera and terra cotta tiles arrayed in patterns along the walls, copper accents on the counter and display case, a wood fire at the back of a small sitting area; everything about the room screamed to Missy that this was a place well-taken care of, unlike the rest of the city she'd seen.

“Yeah,” said Expatriette as she walked up behind Missy, “People know not to mess with Illya and Rosa. Half the city’s illegal arms trade makes its way through here in one way or another. Even the Organization knows not to mess with them.”

“YOU!” shouted a voice from the kitchen, “WHAT DID I TELL YOU ABOUT COMING HERE?” A small, dark woman, covered in flour, stomped her way into the main area in front of Missy and Expatriette.

“You said not to come back without a response from your nephew, Rosa, and I have one.”

“Oh, and what does the fruit of my brother’s loins say in response to my offer?”

“He said no.”

“Is that really what he said?” asked the woman, Rosa, with a squint.

“No, but there’s a child present, so I can’t give the exact words he used.”

“Oh, Madre de Dios! I didn’t even notice! Child, would you like anything to eat? If you are in the company of this woman, you cannot be eating enough. Come, sit, I’ll bring you food.”

"As amazing as your food is, Rosa," said Expatriette, "we're actually here to see Illya. Missy here is injured."

"All the more reason to give her food then. A body needs food to heal." Rosa sighed and gestured to a door behind the counter. "You will find Illya in the back, as usual, making a mess, as usual. I will bring food back later."

"Why'd you tell her my name?" asked Missy as she and Expatriette walked through the door and into a short hallway.

"Rosa and Illya like to know who they're dealing with. It's one of the things that keeps people from bringing the hammer down on this place. Well, that and the large arsenal they have stored in the basement." Expatriette smiled and turned to Missy. "Besides, if what I've heard from Faye and Caspit is right, you don't even exist in this universe. Sometimes a name that doesn't lead to anything is the best kind to have."

"Indeed it is," said an accented voice from behind the door at the end of the hallway. "That is but one of the reasons I changed mine." The door opened, revealing a tall, middle-aged, blonde woman who smiled as she saw Expatriette. "Amanda! How is my favourite repeat customer? Are you still fit as a horse?"

"That's not the expression and you know it, Illya, but I'm fine. We're here for a look at my young friend. Bruised ribs at a minimum, but I want to make sure there's nothing more."

"Ah, yes. Good, good. Come on then, into the chair with you." Illya gestured Missy to come into the room with her. "Would you like Amanda to come in too, or would you rather she wait outside with my, frankly gorgeous, wife?"

Missy looked back to Expatriette, who shrugged.

"Your choice, kid. Illya's… well she's not a good person, but she won't kill you unless you deserve it. You can trust her that far at least."

"I think I'd like you in with us, actually," Missy said quietly.

"Haha! A wise choice, Miss Missy," laughed Illya. "Never remain alone with an ex-Soviet scientist you do not know. That is my pearl of wisdom for you. Free of charge. Now get in the chair."

Missy looked agog at Illya as she walked through the door into a mess of a room. Only a complicated tinkertech chair in the middle of the room remained clear of boxes and piles of paper.

"Ah," said Illya, "I do not meet with your mental images of an ex-Soviet scientist? Did you believe the movies and think we were all burly bearded men? It is an understandable mistake to make. You are not the only one to think that, after all. Fortunately, some of us are learning better, aren’t we?. But still, that is beyond the point. Get in the chair and I will see what is wrong with you."

Missy looked at the chair, then back at Expatriette, who shrugged again. Missy sighed and climbed into the chair and laid back as it started humming. Illya moved a stack of papers from in front of a display and started nodding to herself.

“Well,” said Illya after a few minutes, “I have news, good news, and bad news. The news is that you have no broken ribs, just extensively bruised ones. Avoid body blows for the next four weeks, longer if possible. But you are a superhero, so I fully expect to see you again within ten days.”

“Okay, and what’s the good news?” asked Missy as she climbed out of the scanning chair.

“Good news is that your brain tumor is benign! Bad news is that you have a brain tumor.”

“She has a what?” Expatriette all but shouted. It was hard to tell who it was directed toward.

“A brain tumor,” said Illya, calmly. “Odd structure though, it winds all the way through and around the parietal lobe, actually forcing out some parts of the frontal lobe to do so. Tell me, Miss Missy, Have you had any massive personality shifts lately? Or a lack of mental flexibility? Lowered inhibitions or poor judgment or planning skills?”

“Not that I can think of, no,” said Missy. “But aren’t you just talking about my Gemma?”

“Your what?”

“My Corona Gemma? The thing that lets me use my superpowers?”

“Kid,” said Expatriette, “Trust me when I say I know a lot about superpowers, and this is the first I’ve ever heard of a brain tumor giving them to you. Usually it’s random chance, or aliens, or lab accidents. Stuff like that. Unexpected chemicals is a common one around here, but not once have I heard about superpowers via brain tumor.”

“Well, trust me when I say this is normal where I come from,” said Missy. “You have a really shitty thing happen to you, your brain grows a new part, and you get superpowers. It happens. I’m fine. Can we go now?”

“Yeah, sure. You go back up front. I’ll take care of things with Comrade Doktor here.”

Missy nodded and stepped out the door and back into the hall. As she walked back to the front of the building, she twisted space just enough that sound carried itself farther than it normally would have otherwise.

“You sure she’s okay, Illya?”

“Yes, very sure. Well, decently sure. Eighty-five percent. Well, eighty percent. Keep an eye on her if you don’t want her dead, maybe? She seems… reckless. Make it seventy-five percent, but not all because of the tumor.”

“Right,” sighed Expatriette. “I know the type. Overconfident and immortal right up until she isn’t. I’ll see what I can do.”

“Thank you, Amanda. I would hate to have dead child come through my doors again.”

“Ah, Missy, was it?”

Missy jumped at the voice. She had stopped just outside the door from the hallway into the main area and had been too focused on listening to Illya and Expatriette to notice Rosa standing right in front of her.

“Uh, yes, Ma’am?”

“Do not call me Ma’am. That is a word for mothers and those who deserve respect. For now, to you? I am neither. To you, I am Rosa.”

Missy nodded uncertainty.

“Good. Now, if Amanda’s habits hold, she will try to decline staying and having a good meal, so rather than argue with her, I am giving this bag of food to you to take to those poor souls you are no doubt staying with. Understand?”

Missy nodded again, and took the warm bag Rosa shoved at her just as Expatriette walked back into the front room.

“I’d love to stay and have a snack, Rosa,” she said. “But we’ve gotta go. Illya’s got a list of stuff I’ll need later, let me know when you get it in. Missy? Let’s go.”

Missy followed Expatriette to the door, where she pulled a small rock from a pocket and began touching it to the corners of the doorframe.

“No! You will not be doing that infernal magic here in my store! If you are to bring down curses, do it at the coffee shop next door. They deserve it. Very rude customers.”

Expatriette sighed and put the rock back in her pocket. “Faye assures me that it’s not infernal magic, it's chaotic. But fine. We’ll go next door.”

At the next business over, Expatriette took the rock out again and touched it to the four corners of the doorframe. She opened the door and Missy felt space twist in a way that was both incredibly familiar, and incredibly disorienting at the same time. Seeing Expatriette gesture her forward, Missy took a deep breath and stepped through.

On the other side of the door wasn't a coffee shop, but instead a good-sized entryway with doors leading off somewhere. Missy looked around, amazed.

"Yeah, the door spell is disconcerting the first few times," smiled Expatriette, "but you've got to admit it's useful." She looked into a room off the side of the entryway. "Looks like Faye's out like a light, and frankly you should be the same. Let's find you a room and get you to sleep."



Mist swirled through the room and an unearthly light rose and fell with a rhythm Missy couldn't quite discern. In the center of a complex array of softly glowing green lines stood Nightmist, Faye Diamond as she had introduced herself, chanting and slowly turning hazy around her edges. Missy remembered that her mist form was how Nightmist got her name, and took shallow breaths, just in case, to avoid breathing in her host.

To Missy's left at the edge of the room stood Harpy, or rather "Lillian, just Lillian". She was muttering to herself under her breath, apparently making sure the spell Ms. Diamond was casting wasn't about to do anything unexpectedly dangerous. The two mages had explained the process to Missy before they had started but honestly, most of it had gone straight over her head. Talk of "arcane cosmic resonances" and "synchronising personal chaotic waveforms" was more than she could deal with. Her main experience with magic before this was the time her dad hired a magician for her ninth birthday. The magician showed up, her dad didn't. When it had become clear Missy had no idea what the two women were talking about, Lillian kneeled down, put her hand on Missy's shoulder, and smiled.

"The short version is that Faye is going to open a gate, and use a small metaphysical bit of you to try and make sure it opens on your Earth. The first part is easy, it's like the door spell you and Amanda used earlier. The second part is harder, because, well, because you're from a different universe, and there are more of those than you might think. Getting yours is going to be like throwing a dart a hundred yards with your feet and getting a bullseye."

"And this'll work?" asked Missy

"With you here," said Ms. Diamond, "it just might. Otherwise we'd be throwing that dart blindfolded. Now, if we were trying to open a gate to every universe, that would be different. Then it's mostly just a matter of power and arcane conduit strength…"

Missy tuned out again after that, as Ms. Diamond and Lillian's started arguing about hypothetical spells until eventually Setback, who insisted Missy call him Pete, slipped on a loose piece of paper and down the main stairs. By the time Missy had gotten back from checking on him, Ms. Diamond and Lillian's were chalking runes and shapes onto the floor.

Ms. Diamond’s chanting grew louder and some of the mist swirled into a small ring in front of her. The pulsing rhythm of the light in the mist stabilised and became a constant beat at regular intervals, speeding up slightly as the chanting grew louder until, with a snap that Missy didn’t so much hear as feel with her power, Ms. Diamond stopped chanting and the area inside the small ring of mist began to swirl with colors and shapes that didn’t quite look right to the eye.

“The gate is made,” intoned Nightmist, her voice was different, less physical somehow. “Not we must direct it to its final destination. Missy Biron. Come to me, but take care not to disrupt the circle. The results of altering the shape of a ritual in progress can be… disastrous.”

Missy carefully picked her way across the many lines glowing on the floor until she got to Nightmist, who turned her around to face the swirling shapes inside the ring.

“Look into the gate, child, and concentrate on your home. I will direct the terminus with that.”

Missy stared into the portal and thought hard about home. About Brockton Bay. She thought about the ship graveyard, about the Boardwalk. About Arcadia and the Wards HQ. She thought about Dennis, making a stupid joke, and about Carlos, shaking his head ruefully. With a blush, she even thought of Dean, then scowled as she thought of Glory Girl.

The colors and shapes inside the ring were solidifying, becoming more real, and they looked like the skyline of Brockton Bay from on top of Captain’s Hill. Missy reached for the portal, just out of her grasp, and nudged space just the smallest amount to bring the portal to her.

Chaos.

The image of Brockton Bay dissolved like the mist it came from and a riotous explosion of nothingness took its place, fling Missy away and dispersing most of the mist in the room. From the new rift something green pulled itself. It turned, and surveyed the room with one gigantic eye, and grinned with a mouth containing nothing but rows upon rows of teeth. The mouth opened, and the last thing Vista heard before the room descended into violence was Harpy shouting the name of the monster in front of her.

“BALARIAN!”



“He’s moving.”

“I see him, keep the lens on him, Vista.”

“Will do. Is the bug ready?”

It will be, the magic is a bit tricky though, and Faye’s not here to help.

“Good enough, Harpy. Vista, where’d he go?”

“He’s six blocks down and turning into the parking garage. I can keep the lens up, but there’s enough stuff between him and us that it’s getting hard.”

“Collapse it then. We’ll reposition. Setback, are you in the area?”

Just got here, but I had to borrow a kid’s bike to do it. Someone make a note to get this back to him.” A horrendous crash came through Vista’s earpiece, followed by Setback’s voice again. “Never mind, just get him a new bike.

Vista sighed and saw Expatriette doing the same next to her. Setback’s wild swings of luck could be useful, if you weren’t on the receiving end of a bad one, but they got tiring to deal with quickly.

It had been nine days since the incident with Balarian, as Ms. Diamond had called the… thing that had forced itself out of the rift. Between two actual, literal wizards keeping it from doing anything more than flail its tentacles around (destroying several walls in the process), Vista forcing the rift open again by stretching it out as far as she could, and a lucky punch in the thing’s eye from Setback, the fight had gone relatively quickly, and with no more injuries than scrapes and bruises. After that things had fallen into something resembling normality. Ms. Diamond would stay in the Manor researching or training Lillian, then disappear for a day or two because of some case or another from her other job as a private investigator. Missy thought she might be a bit angry over how Missy ruined her spell, but if she was then she hid it well.

Mr. Fixer, Slim Walker, would spend the day at his garage, then either stand around the Manor or walk through the city all night. If he ever slept, Missy never saw it.

For their part, Pete and Amanda acted like a less aggressive version of Assault and Battery back in Brockton Bay. Still lovey dovey, but neither got irritated with the other’s presence. Or at least, not while Missy was watching.

Every few days, Amanda would hand Missy a bag with some nondescript clothes, and the two of them would go sit in a public park, or ride the bus for a few hours. Missy hadn’t known why at first, but after the third time out, she had recognised a man in a grey silk shirt with some sort of metallic eye patch from a previous excursion.

“So,” Missy asked, “Why are we following these guys?”

Amanda smiled tightly. “Damn, I owe Pete five bucks now.”

“What do you mean?”

“Oh, Pete said you’d realise what we were up to sometime today, I said you wouldn’t catch on until tomorrow.”

“I’m not sure how I feel about you betting on how clever I am, “ frowned Missy. “Remember, I have been a superhero for a few years by now.”

“I’ll try to remember that in the future,” said Amanda, smiling. “And to answer your question, that man,” she gestured at the man in the silk shirt, “is a fence for the local organized crime syndicate; a conspiracy of crime that’s so big we can only really call it The Organization.”

“Ah,” said Missy, “and we’re following this guy to find his boss. Then we’ll follow the boss until we find his boss, and so on until we find the guy at the top?”

“Not quite,” sighed Amanda. “We know exactly who the Chairman is, and even where he lives and does his business.” She pointed to the largest building in the skyline, proudly emblazoned with the name "Pike".

“Then why are we watching this flunky?” asked Missy, maybe a little too loudly as she stood up. “We should go after this ‘Chairman’ directly!”

“We tried that, kid,” said Amanda. “We tried that and Slim ended up dead.”

“Wait, Mr. Walker died? Then who’s that walking around the Manor?”

“It’s Slim, but-- Look, it’s complicated. Just trust me when I say that a decapitation strike isn’t the play here.”

“Then what are we doing?”

“Did they have Al Capone on your Earth?”

“Yeah, if we’re thinking about the same guy. The gangster, right?”

“That's the one. Did the cops get him?”

“Yeah, but I don’t really remember how. We hadn’t gotten to that in school yet.”

Amanda let out a short bark of laughter. “Yeah, well here, he didn’t get taken down for racketeering, or smuggling, or even murder. He got taken down for tax fraud.”

“So we’re following his lackeys looking for--”

“For dodgy accounting. We mark where they go, then Faye and Lillian drop in a little magic pebble that records everything there.” Expatriette looked around. “Shit, he’s gone. Did you see where he went?”

“No, I didn’t, but…” Vista thought for a moment, It’d be hard, fine control like this usually was, especially around crowds, but it might be worth it. “I’m gonna try something. Let me know if you see the guy.”

Vista carefully felt out the space above where Silk Shirt had been and began to twist it, massaging it into shape and rearranging it just so. Working slowly, she teased one end of the twist to just in front of Expatriette and held it there. It wasn't so much a telescope as it was a better vantage point.

"Nice," Expatriette whistled. "How visible is this?"

"If anyone looks up at it they'll see whatever's on this end."

"Good thing no one ever looks up then. Can you move it? Just a bit north?"

Vista concentrated for a moment and the far end of her improvised peephole moved twelve feet to the north.

"Great, I see him. Just coming out of the deli. And with a suitcase he didn't have on the way in. Come on, kid, we'll come back here later. Meanwhile, we've got a pickup to make."

Once they were back in the van driving through the pothole-ridden streets, although Missy did what she could to smooth the road as they passed, Amanda looked at Missy aprisingly.

"You did good today, kid," she said. "You've got some potential. You said your team back home was basically PR, right?"

"Yeah, go through the safe parts of town, wave the flag, tell kids not to do drugs, that sort of crap."

"In their defense, the optics of sending, no offense here, children to beat up gangsters aren't good."

"Yeah," sighed Missy, already checking out of the conversation. "I've heard all this before."

"You didn't let me finish. Sending kids to fight doesn't look good, but looking good is a luxury. One it sounds like your Protectorate can’t actually afford, what with letting murderers run free. I'm betting you went out on, let's call them ‘solo patrols’ that your team leads didn't necessarily sign off on, right?"

Missy didn’t say anything.

"Yeah, thought so. Here's the thing. While you're with us, we're responsible for you, and I know you'll want to go out on your own from time to time. But you know basically nothing about this city, and I'm not letting you go out to get killed because you got too close to the rat monster or something worse. So if you go out on your own, which is a big if, then you're not going out without protection."

“What do you mean ‘protection’?” asked Missy as the van pulled to a stop in a familiar parking lot. “Wait, this is that bakery, isn’t it? Rosa and Illya’s?”

“I told you half the city’s illegal arms trade comes through here, right? We’re about to make use of my customer loyalty discount.”

Missy wasn’t quite sure what to make of what happened after that, Rosa bustling around, fitting her for, of all things, a child-sized flak jacket, a green hoodie that was apparently bulletproof, and a variable-length combination stun baton and taser, which had a grip meant for a hand with more fingers than Missy’s. Rosa’s claim of a “lifetime warranty” on all this did very little to make Missy more comfortable in what was almost certainly stolen equipment, but she had to admit that it would all probably keep her alive longer than just her Wards costume would have.

Now Vista stood in her modified, and significantly bulkier, costume and gestured to Expatriette. A few steps later they were on top of a building four blocks away with a sightline into the parking garage Setback had just crashed his bike into. Another small twist of space and they watched as a large raven dropped something at Setback’s feet. He took what Vista knew to be a pebble with a small rune etched onto it and tossed it further into the garage. An improbable number of bounces and lucky ricochets later it settled into the back seat of a nondescript car. The same one they’d all been tailing for the past hour.

Okay!” said Setback over the radio, “We’ve got it! Can you get me up to you two?

“Sure thing,” said Vista, and made the space between Setback and the roof where she and Expatriette waited less of a gulf and more of a gap. Setback stepped into the warped space and Vista’s awareness of it vanished. Space snapped back to where it belonged and Setback fell to the street from midair. Vista tried to reach for him, to shorten the distance so he wouldn’t end up with a broken back, or worse, but nothing came. Her senses were merely human again.

She didn’t hear the crack as Setback landed, and she didn’t hear his reassurances over the radio that he was fine. All Missy Biron heard was the realisation echoing inside her head.

She had lost her powers.

liarliar
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Ooh, there's a twist!

I really enjoyed Guise realising he's in fanfic, thet was hilarious.

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ISSUE 7: THE BATTLE OF BROCKTON BAY

Lieutenant Joseph “Jojo” Johnson hated the night shift at Alpha station. It was just ten hours of watching screens and listening to perimeter check-ins every 20 minutes. Sure, running shifts at the PRT station that maintained the forcefield bridge that connected the city of Brockton Bay to the Protectorate base in the bay looked good on paper, but anyone with more than a day of PRT service would look at the posting and see it for what it was: grunt work for the new officer. Made worse by him only being given a skeleton crew of four, including himself, because of personnel shifts the week before.

He sighed and checked the latest round of check-ins. Private Smith on the north, no change. Corporal Reynolds on the west, no change. Corporal Peters on the south, no report. He reached for his radio.

“Peters, you there? You missed check-in.”

Static.

“Peters, report!”

Static. Johnson tried Plan B.

“Reynolds, can I get you to check on Peters? She missed her check-in.”

“Sure thing, boss, you think she’s just on another unscheduled break?”

“I hope so, but you know how these things go, it’s my ass in the fire if something goes wrong.”

“When you write up the report, are you going to mention you keep talking about your ass to your subordinates?”

“Reynolds, how’d you like to be guarding latrines?”

“Point made, boss, I’m on my way.”

After a few minutes of silence during which Johnson tried to distract himself by staring at the readouts for the forcefield bridge to the Rig, all green. Reynolds’ voice came over the radio.

“Boss, put us on lockdown. Now.”

“What’s wrong?”

“I found Peters, her throat’s been cut.”

“Understood. All hands, return to base.” A feeling of dread calm came over Johnson as he reached for the direct line to PRT HQ. He never saw the shadow pull itself off of the wall behind him, and the last thing he heard was a wet thunk as he hit the floor.

Citizen Shade -- it was still odd for Sophia to think of herself with that name instead of Shadow Stalker -- looked at her handiwork. According to the read Citizen Adept had given, the only PRT trooper left in the facility should be the lone man patrolling the northern perimeter, and he’d be dealt with momentarily by the leader of this little strike force. Citizen Shade touched the headset in her ear.

“Pure, this is Shade. If you’re done, the building’s ours. Send in Volatile.”

“Understood, he’s on his way now.”

After a few minutes of waiting, Citizen Volatile walked into the command room. Instead of bothering Shade with questions, he moved straight to the workstation of the now deceased Lieutenant Johnson.

“We’re in luck,” he said after a few moments of studying the screen. “This guy left the workstation unlocked and with full privileges.”

“What does that mean, dumbass?” Shade hadn’t liked dealing with Volatile even before they had ended up on the same team, the winning team, together, but Dawn was right, he had power, he wasn’t prey.

“It means we can do things the easy way.” Volatile pressed a few keys on the computer and the lights throughout the building all went dead.

“What the fuck just happened?”

“The easy way,” said someone said from behind Shade. She had her knife out and moving only to stop at the last moment when she realised it was Citizen Adept. He smiled shakily as he stared down at the knife. “This way, the troopers on the Rig can’t reestablish the bridge remotely. No need for anything drastic at all!”

“Good job,” said Citizen Pure over the radio, “But we’re still going to follow the plan.”

Shade grinned. “You might want to look away from the window.”

As she spoke, a lance of light shot from Citizen Pure, flying above the building, straight into Bridge Generator Station Beta on the Rig. The night was painted briefly in orange as the explosion faded away.

The Battle of Brockton Bay had begun.


It had been coincidence that kept Director Emily Piggot at her desk until the early hours of the morning, but it was experience that made her take a second look at the information in front of her.

"And this is accurate?" she asked.

"Yes, Ma'am," said Armsmaster, who was currently stranded on the Rig, from a screen on her desk. "Reports indicate the bridge went down just before the explosion at Station Beta, and remote observation shows Purity maintaining position above Station Alpha. We've brought in helicopters to try and evacuate, only for Purity to shoot them out of the air once they're loaded. Unfortunately, our active Protectorate members are here as well, so without calling in the Wards, the help we can offer right now is limited, at best."

"Understood. Keep working on a way to get here alive, and keep me updated." Piggot flicked off the image of Armsmaster and turned to Force Commander Pyke, standing at ease in front of her. "Who do we have on duty right now?"

"Well, Ma'am, with all due respect, it's 0230. We only have two squads ready for deployment from PRTHQ, and a rapid recon squad ready to deploy from auxiliary site 7."

"Get the recon squad to Station Alpha, and find out exactly who we're dealing with besides Purity, and call in as many squads to HQ as you can. I want them ready for deployment as soon as possible."

"Yes Ma'am!" Pyke saluted, turned sharply on his heel, and left the office.

Pigott sighed and rubbed her temples, then turned to the other person in the room. "What is it, Brooks?"

"You know this is a trap, right?" he asked.

"Of course it's a damn trap!" snapped Piggot. "What I want to know is why didn't we have any warning about it from our local visitor from the future?"

"Why d'you think the bridge stations were on minimum crew? Just enough people there that it didn't seem suspicious."

"I don't like you, Brooks. I don't like that you're able to do whatever you want with no oversight, and I don't like that you're throwing away the lives of my people without even so much as a 'by your leave'!"

For a moment, Brooks didn't say anything.  Then he shook his head in resignation.

"Emily, if you could go back to Ellisburg and stop Nilbog, would you do it?"

"In an instant."

"And if doin' so meant you had to lie to your team and personally order them to their deaths?"

Piggot hesitated, then answered. "I still would. My team is dead anyway. At least this way they won't have died for nothing."

"Just so," Brooks nodded. "I don't like this any more than you, but there're things bigger and worse than Nilbog or Dawn out there. And if we can't stop 'em? We're all dead anyway."

"Fine, whatever," said Piggot. "You have your crusade and letting this attack on my city happen is all part of ending it. I don't like it and I don't like you. But thanks to your Beckett Protocol protections, I also can't stop you. So instead, you and I aren't leaving this room until you tell me what Dawn is planning with this trap, and how we counter it."

"You understand that me tellin' you how everything goes won't work, right? I know what happened when Maria and I scouted this timeline, and me givin' you the strategies you used then would be a bit of a paradox. Havin' too many of those at once ain't good for a local spacetime."

"Then you tell me what's likely to happen. Who Dawn has and what they can do, and we'll come up with our own strategies without you. Is that paradox-free enough for you?"

"Frankly, no. Even just givin' you that much has more than a whiff of bootstrappin' about it." Brooks grinned a little and tipped his hat. "But if you don't tell anyone, then neither will I."


Seven IFVs leaving the deployment garage. Standard load is one full squad per vehicle. Seven squads fits with the number of personnel entering over the past hour. Probably all they could get at this time of day. Official loadout for a PRT squad is 2,247 pounds of gear and trooper combined. None of those trucks are riding very low….

Lisa cut herself off there. Knowing too much could be dangerous around Dawn. One glance was enough to figure that out. It rankled, but survival came first.

"Citizen Insight," said the woman herself from behind Lisa. "What can you tell me?"

"Seven trucks, seven squads, boss," Lisa smiled. "They're headed east, so Station Alpha and Pure's team."

"Excellent. Citizen Push's momentum fields will stop more from arriving here?"

"Should, do, yeah. Assuming he's sober enough to have put them up right."

"He knows the consequences if he hasn't. What about Citizen Blackout?"

"It'll take about a minute, but he'll be able to cover the whole building. That won't stop anything from getting through before he's done though, or any wired connections either. And even if the team at the transfer station takes out the power, they've got generators on-site."

"But you know where these generators are, don't you?"

Lisa nodded and pointed to a spot near the garage exit.

"Then I will coordinate with Citizen Blackout and our teams at the transfer station and phone exchange. We will strike simultaneously."

Lisa nodded.

"Insight…" mused Dawn, looking at her. "To look at anything and know everything about it. What is that be like?"

"More often than not it's a headache, not worth it. I don't need to know what everyone I look at had for breakfast."

"And what did you learn when you look at me, I wonder?"

Lisa swallowed and composed herself for a moment. "I learned that stealing ATM codes was a waste of my abilities. That you'll do whatever it takes to whoever it takes to see your vision come to fruition. I learned which side was going to win, and I joined it."

Dawn studied Lisa for a moment, then laughed. It should have been cold, but it was as heartfelt as any Lisa had ever heard, and that only made it worse. Someone willing to go as far as Lisa knew Dawn had shouldn't be able to sound so… human.

"Just so, Insight, just so." Dawn smiled. "If you were my daughter, I would have no complaints. Prepare yourself. Today we show this world what the future looks like." She began to glow and took to the air, moving into position to strike at the PRT emergency generators.

Lisa looked after her and reached for her radio, her hand brushing against a small pouch she had been told not to open until she knew it was needed. It was time to get things started.


Force Commander Pyke looked over his assembled troopers and sighed. Even conservative estimates had put Dawn’s little cult of personality at two dozen capes of mid to high threat levels and, loathe as he was to admit it, his sixty men would be hard pressed to deal with that many without Protectorate support. Still, they had the advantage of familiar terrain, a defensible position, and unexpected numbers on their side. So with luck, maybe half his men would make it out on their own two feet by the time was done.

As he positioned his troops throughout the building to cover as many angles as he could, Pyke noticed a lone figure leaning against the back wall of the main lobby. Closer inspection revealed it to be Jim Brooks, the consultant who’d been running around reassigning personnel and generally shitting up anything resembling a decent deployment structure. It was Brooks’ fault that Pyke didn’t even have his full complement of troops, seeing as he sent seemingly random members of Pyke’s command on enforced leave in Boston. Pyke approached him.

“All due respect, sir,” Pyke said in his best “dealing with civilians” voice, “But non-combatants need to be away from this area. We’re expecting Dawn’s forces to attack at any moment.”

“Y’ ever notice how whenever someone says ‘all due respect’, they really mean ‘no respect at all’?” asked Brooks as he fiddled with a small silver box.

“Can’t say I have, sir,” said Pyke, who had meant exactly that. “But you do need to be out of the area. I can’t be--” Pyke was cut off as the building went dark. He reached for his radio. “Report, now!”

“All power and outside comms just cut out, Sir. Backup generators aren’t responding and we can’t see out the windows either.”

Pyke had to reach back to his days in the Marines before he found words that he felt could properly express how he was feeling. They’d been played, badly. Beside him Pyke heard Brooks push himself away from the wall with a grunt.

“I s’ppose that’s my cue.”

“Cue?”

“Yeah, the tricky part ‘bout tachyon comms is makin’ sure the message don't get where it’s goin’ before it needed to be sent. 'Course I can edge up to a paradox, that's easy, but outright violatin' causality like that can lead to some major damage. Wouldn't do to send the whole buildin' outside of space n' time after all.”

“Brooks, what the actual hell are you talking about?”

“You’re about to get some reinforcements.” There was a click, presumably from the box Brooks had been holding, and then Pyke found himself shielding his eyes as space twisted open in front of him in a blinding light. A figure stepped out.

“Force Commander Pyke?” asked Alexandria as shapes Pyke realised were the rest of the Triumvirate, the Protectorate ENE, and some capes from further afield, plus a crowd of other figures in the comforting bulk of PRT rapid response armor, stepped out behind her. “We’re here to help.”


Recently, materials scientists have discovered a particular arrangement of carbon nanotubes that, when applied to a surface, absorbs 99.96% of visible light, rendering the surface as close to perfectly black as modern physics allows. When the human eye sees this shade of black, called Vantablack, it renders it as something akin to a featureless hole in space.

The PRT building looked like that now. All detail swallowed up in the ultimate silhouette. Even in the darkened streets, all power gone thanks to Dawn's team taking out the nearby transfer station, the colorless void that was the building stood out.

Dawn approached Citizen Blackout, still shaking from exerting himself in a way he never had before.

"You've done well, Blackout," she said as she put a glowing hand on his shoulder. The darkness boiling off him evaporated from around her touch and Blackout stood up straighter, reinvigorated and no longer shaking.

"Thank you, Ma'am," he said, "I've never had to cover anything this big before. It's good to know I can."

Dawn nodded and, having seen to her citizen, took to the air, a glowing beacon in the darkness.

"Citizens!" she called, and all eyes turned toward her. "Tonight we take back this city from the ones who have wrongly stolen it! It is the right of the powerful to--”

At that moment, Dawn was interrupted by a crash from the colorless void that was the front of the PRT building. She turned to look, and was nearly knocked out of the air by a caped figure in black rocketing past her, before it turned to the east and flew away faster than the eye could follow. Half a moment later she dodged a burst of something that flew out of the blackness. It impacted a building behind her, and the building turned inside out.

“Inversion,” came a voice from all around her, “Nasty stuff. I wonder if it’s Manton-limited.” A man in a glowing green cloak floated into the street, then rose to Dawn’s height. She could feel the grin on his face, even behind his mask. Below them, figures poured into the street. “Alexandria and the PRT for your teams around town," said the man. "Legend, and the ENE for your capes here. Hi, I’m Eidolon, and you’re under arrest.”


Jim Brooks had seen superhero fights before. He’d seen teams of heroes fighting villains, waves of minions overrunning positions, and more than once, hordes of monsters assaulting civilians.

Not once had he seen a fight like this. The local Protectorate heroes worked well together, as befitted a team led by a man as obsessed with efficiency as Armsmaster was, but there was only so much the seven of them could do against the scores Dawn had brought. Quantity has a quality all its own, after all. Fortunately, Legend, flitting around above the battle proper, and Miss Militia, perched on a crenelation across the street from Jim, were providing some much-needed fire support, taking out potential threats before they could escalate.

A woman in a black-spotted outfit jumped into combat with Armsmaster at the same time as a huge, four-legged monster shoved Assault into a wall as it charged across the field, paying no attention to who it was knocking out of the way. A flash of blue zigzagged its way across the field and slammed into the beast, instantly coating it in a block of ice; one of Legend's freeze lasers.

The woman fighting Armsmaster, meanwhile, was dodging every hit he threw at her, even as he avoided hers. Without Armsmaster to lead the ground fight, even as Legend fought for air superiority, the Protectorate would quickly be overwhelmed. Jim took careful aim with his pistol, and let loose a rapid six shots, which came nowhere near the two combatants and instead struck the ice-covered dog monster, still sliding to a halt, and changed its course just enough.

Armsmaster saw it first, but rather than jump away, he pressed the attack all the harder. His opponent never took a hit, but she also couldn't get any of her own in. Instead she stepped back to try and catch her breath. Or she tried to. Instead of the clear space she was expecting, there was a solid mass of ice and dog behind her. To her credit, she only stumbled for a moment, but that moment was all Armsmaster needed to end the fight.

A crash of concrete and glass drew Jim's attention up and away from the street. Twenty stories up Eidolon and Dawn flew against each other, her halo of light fuzzing around the edges whenever it came too close to Eidolon. Jim had never gotten info on what Eidolon was doing up there, but it was keeping Dawn out of the fight, and that's what was important for now.

The two battles, in the air and on the ground, continued this way for some time. Neither side gaining an advantage for long enough to leverage it into something decisive before the other side undercut them and gained an advantage of their own. A fighting stalemate that couldn't last. Eventually someone would misstep, and that would be the beginning of the end.

It was then that the sirens sounded. The battle slowly stopped as everyone realised what that meant, the blackness recessed from the front of the PRT building and the street stood in utter silence until Legend's voice boomed out.

"It's Leviathan," he said grimly, the whole street hanging on his every word, "At Gibraltar. Volunteers, gather… around Armsmaster. Transport to the battle will arrive--"

A flash of gold cut Legend off and threw him to the ground, where he landed with a hard crack of pavement. A moment later, another figure in a long cloak fell hard next to him and crumpled. Eidolon.

Dawn floated to a stop above the heads of the crowd, glowing brightly. The troops under her command began to stand up straighter and look at their opponents with a renewed vigor.

"The old ways are dead!" proclaimed Dawn, voice echoing louder than Legend's had, "If those under attack by Leviathan cannot save themselves, then they do not deserve to be saved by you! Now, my Citizens of the Sun, you will fight! And you will win!"

The battle resumed, but worse than before. Without Eidolon keep Dawn busy, or Legend offering pinpoint fire support, the Protectorate was losing. Badly.

Jim sighed as his arm began to shift and reconfigure. "So much for doin' this the local's way. Time to end this."

"What are you talking about?" asked Assault from the Protectorate comm unit Jim had commandeered to keep tabs on the battle, "She's defeated two-thirds of the Triumvirate! How do you expect to win?"

"Simple." Jim pointed his arm at the sky. "I cheat." A flare of green light flew into the air from Brook's arm, casting the entire street in eerie shadow for a moment until it faded. Once the light was gone, nothing happened for a moment. Then Dawn twitched once, twice, and fell to the ground into a pool of darkness.


Lisa saw the flare go up and instantly knew what she had to do.

"Alec," she said into her radio, "Brian, it's go time."

From where she sat, three floors up on a fire escape on a building a few hundred feet back from the main fighting, Lisa had a clear view of Dawn, who had spent the last month with her personal parahuman advisors and brutes in close proximity. Not enough time for Alec to gain full control, not since they were being subtle, but more than enough for him to get a solid read on her nervous system. Including how her powers worked.

Lisa saw Dawn twitch once, and she slid down the fire escape. She reached the ground just in time to see Dawn twitch again. She ran to the crowd, and reached the edge just as Dawn landed and the street was flooded with darkness. Lisa had only walked forward a few steps when a hand landed on her shoulder and pulled her a big to the right.

"Don't trip," said Brian, Citizen Blackout, no, with this betrayal of Dawn, he was probably back to Grue. "She's this way."

With Grue to guide her, it was a short walk to a clearing in the darkness where Dawn lay glowing softly and twitching, with Alec standing beside her, sweating. She caught sight of Lisa and glowed brighter, only for the glow to sputter and fade.

Looking at Dawn like this, Lisa knew what had to happen next. She reached into the pouch she was carrying, and pulled out a hypodermic injector filled with a glowing blue-white liquid. She shouldn't have said anything, but some things in the multiverse run true, even to their own detriment. Lisa crouched next to Dawn and looked her in the eye. She let her power off its lead and opened her mouth.

“You say you’re the future of humanity but you can’t even stand up, can you? You say you’re superior because you have power that others don’t, but it’s less than a candle here." Lisa smiled as new facts flooded her brain. One final barb before the end. "You say you’ll lead the world to a new order, but even your own daughter left you after you tried to kill her for the crime of being ‘merely human’. Goodnight, Dawn Cohen. You are not special here.”

With that, Lisa placed the injector against Dawn's neck, and triggered it. A quiet click and the liquid inside flowed into Dawn, and she stopped struggling, and closed her eyes.

"Clear the street, Brian, Brooks' stuff worked." Lisa smiled. "We're heroes."


The aftermath was short and to the point. Some of Dawn's army escaped in the confusion as Legend and Eidolon recovered and led volunteers to Gibraltar, only to find that Leviathan had left before they arrived.

Never before had there been a violation of the unwritten rules this flagrant, and it was therefore notable that only two capes ended up being sent to the Birdcage. Brad Meadows, better known as Hookwolf, and Dawn herself. Most of the new Citizens of the Sun who remained went to low-security prisons or vanished, only for suspiciously similar heroes to join the Protectorate somewhere across the country.

It was only after watching the live feed from Dragon of the two of them, Dawn still drugged to the gills with Brooks' future toxin, being sealed into the most secure location on the planet that Armsmaster sat himself down in front of his log recorder. He took a deep breath and activated the device.

“Colin, the first thing you need to know is that the man in front of you, Jim Brooks, is telling you the truth…"

 

 

Author note:
IT LIVES!

Wow, this took... some time to finish didn't it? I blame a) life, b) my inability to write decent action scenes to save my life and c) my brain deciding that it didn't want to write. At all. Out of spite, probably. Anyway, thanks as always to @silverpower for encouragement and making sure I didn't commit any excessively egregious errors, and to you (yes you!) for remembering this story exists and reading it. Comments are always appreciated