The slime had reached the subnatural studentsโ chosen launch point by the time they had set up, the gelatinous mass creeping pulsing tendrils up the building slowly while the bulk of its body flooded the edifice carefully. In its growing mass of slime were remnants of the city and its citizens, breaking down slowly. Its rising body reached the third floor and no higher, much of its mass spread out like a sea of clear agar. Veins and capillaries led back to the massive circulation system and nervous system nestled deep inside its amorphous form, the heart easily ten times the size of an average person and the brain even larger still, at roughly triple the heartโs size. Everything beat to the rhythm of the red organ and as its center passed the building where an ambush awaited, the crucial targets passed directly beneath the window where the students were setting up, heart suspended neatly beside the brain.
Meanwhile, lines of gray crinkled the air at random, targeting the tallest buildings first with a certain petty vengeance. The spread was haphazard, but eventually formed a rough ring that indicated the attacking mageโs radius of effectโand the centerโsome seven hundred or so meters around the convention center that the slime was deliberately flowing around without touching.
At the evacuation point, news had yet to reach the soldiers there of the recent massacre. But by then someone else had their full attention regardless.
Director Zhang stood behind a ring of guards, a hint of glossy skin around her throat the only indicator that she was wearing wishalloy in the event things went wrong. Pantyhose and gloves hid the rest of the evidence that she had anything supernatural on her body, save for the large semi-automatic in her hand. Her presence, however, was enough to divert any attention from the screams and chaos transmitted over the cuffs, if anyone could even discern beyond the screams and chaos in the vicinity.
Injured and frightened civilians huddled in large groups as large, military vans took them away to a nearby city for recovery. Injured soldiers who had been recovered were the first to be shuttled off, quickly followed by injured citizens. The dead were set aside for the moment to ensure every van could hold the maximum number of living occupants.
The Director stood far in the back, having arrived shortly after Sander had charged off towards the ice giant. The appearance of Catโs Cradle hadnโt seemed to faze her, though her grip on the magical gun tightened marginally. When she received the all-clear, she turned her attention back to the arriving students, waiting for them to turn the corner and drive into view. According to her map, they wouldnโt be long. She knew several of the soldiers with keener ears had caught the transmissions from the cuffs of the offending subnaturals. She also knew her window to stave off the retribution would be small, even for the Director of USARILN East. The public would demand some sort of recompense, and they would expect the modern equivalent of a public stoning for the students involved once news of what sounded almost certainly like civilians being attacked hit the media outlets.
It was a mess, and one she could potentially deal with if she could keep them out of harmโs way first. It was a matter of waiting for an investigation to finish while placating the worst of the affected. And in the ensuring chaos of the ongoing disaster, stalling for time would be simple while the capital of the government recovered. A three-pronged attack was unprecedented and she could manipulate the information to her tastes once they had a better handle on the situation. Easy enough to claim something or other in that midst had manipulation abilities. Had already taken over the humans involved. Too late for them. Politics, after all, was simply how well one could sell a lie. Following through on oneโs word was optional and her influence and reputation afforded her an easy podium from which to sell almost any lie she wanted.
As Kadabra returned from his unsuccessful attempt to annihilate Catโs Cradle, a spray of gray lines tried to catch him in a rough space of 20 meters wide, the timing meant to crush. Kadabra simply avoided it, moving easily out of the way and raising himself higher to survey the situation. And it became clear at once from a birdโs eye view: there was a building left completely untouched in the surging slime and a field of destruction that centered around the carefully preserved location. To test, Kadabra threw a broken roof at it. Gray lines timed their appearance and crushed the approaching projectile with ease. He threw several buildings at it. Three sets of lines appeared to intercept.
It was enough for him to know that the user wasnโt restricted to a single target.
He lifted the building itself. Lines blanketed the air around him and the two of them shot upward, Kadabra on his platform and the crusher inside the lifted convention center. Before he could rise any further, a stark naked figure jumped out of the building window, landing squarely in the slime that saved and enveloped the person, dampening the impact and absorbing the shock. Unlike the rest of the material inside the ooze, the man remained intact, buoyed upward until his head was above the surface of the slime.
Kadabra eyed the spreading ooze, mentally wrestling with the sentient control for a brief second and deciding not to waste his time fighting the being for manipulation of its body. He could win out, perhaps, but there was no time to hover there and engage in a battle of wills, especially not with a monster. They had nothing but conviction at that point. Instead he lifted the ground below the slime, sending entire chunks firing upwards like a gargantuan landmine had detonated below the creature, smaller pieces tearing apart arteries and slime segments alike despite several of the larger fragments unable to push through the viscous mass. Several of the shards skimmed the building from which the spotters planned to attack, scattering concrete in a brief hail on anyone near the windows. Before Kadabra could rain the shards of concrete, steel, and asphalt down for another makeshift shrapnel shot, a wall of gray lines scattered around the floating pieces and pulverized them, the resulting fine dust too small for Kadabra to pick up at that distance. Not that he would have wasted the time trying in the first place.
To the Precursorโs surprise, the creatureโs innards repositioned itself rapidly, sliding left and right at ridiculous speeds to avoid the worst of the projectiles and taking only glancing damage from the pieces that managed to pierce properly. In response to the sudden barrage, the monster reconsolidated its defenses, piling its body back together into a larger, denser mass and threatening to envelope the spottersโ building entirely. Another wave of gray lines within its body cleared out much of the larger rubble, leaving behind a vacuous space only briefly before the slime closed its gaps.
An Animus who was almost a direct counter to Kadabraโs ability and smart enough to remove his clothes to prevent the Precursor from lifting him directly. It was enough to clue Kadabra in that the slime was also a subnatural. Completely lacking in human form, but certainly a subnatural. And they were working in tandem. For the moment he lifted himself out of the range, keeping the crusherโs attention with a steady fire of traffic light poles, broken building segments, and miscellaneous broken objects, forcing the Animus to repeatedly manifest wall after wall of shattering lines to prevent severe damage to both himself and the slime.
The journey towards the slime monster was a whole new experience he'd remember to dread. Each step wallowed him with pain and his broken body made him feel he was carrying some great burden of weight; A feeling he tried to relate to his expression of 'carrying crosses.' Seeing the edge of the slime brought him both satisfaction that he able to make the journey, but also a wave of dread as he now had to figure out what he could do in his current condition.
Even as he had mere moments to consider his next plan of action upon the creeping ooze, his body was giving out. The whole treck he traveled was pathed in his own toxic blood, red streaks dripping through his veil of fire that still burned over his fire; showing that his blood didn't even boil from the flames just like his flesh. That sense of despair, or idea of loss against these vile creatures only gave him more motivation, more reason to keep going. No matter how exhausted he grew, how much pain he'd go through, he would not let his body yield. Though at that point he was well aware that there was only so much raw will power can do in his current state. Determination could only push his body forward, not ignore his injuries.
There was no proper strategy, innovation, or idea he could come up with. What followed then was more along the lines of a desperate animal that was out of logical options; there was no thought of his own safety or proper plan, to him this felt more along the lines of an innate instinct. Chris, despite every fiber of his sore maw wished he hadn't, released the loudest rage-filled cry of a monster he could muster; a fierce toned roar that lingered in length and pitch from pain and weakness, a sound that only reflected more so of a desperate animal in a blind fighting instinct instead of some kind of plea for help.
Chris picked up one nearby car with his maw and flung it towards the slime, followed by two more cars which he flung over with his tail. With three tossed cars aligned in a row in the ooze, Chris unleashed a jet of flames underneath them to ignite and burst their fuel tanks. With what strength he could muster, the dragon-arbiter then limped over and leaped through the wall of flames he created into the ooze, and proceeded to trudge through the slime in hopes that the fire around him would aid in damaging the monster. Or at the very least, help him in move through it with his failing strength.
๐๐ฆ๐: ๐๐๐ก๐ฅ. ๐๐, ๐๐๐๐ / / ๐๐๐ค๐๐๐๐๐ฅ๐ ๐, ๐ป.โ. / / โ๐๐ฅ๐ช / / ~๐๐๐๐ Collab with @RedDusk and @January
The Aberration leaned against the roof's barrier, sighing in frustration as he surveyed the city. Almost a whole hour had passed since the evacuation order but still the crowd showed no sign of easing up. If anything it looked like even more of a pain to wade through. Ignoring the Regulars, his gaze moved vertically, binoculars trained on the rubble shooting up in the distance. The slime and grey lines were still present. Man, shouldn't the Precursors' top dog have the situation handled by now? Kadabra was really taking his sweet time.
And Brent's team was right in the midst of it all.
There was no time to uselessly stress though. A distant figure traversing the rooftops caught his eye and Ernie's hand moved back to the communicator.
"Sander? What are you doing?"
Sander's only response was an annoyed grunt as he flung himself onto a vertical wall and began climbing.
A pang of annoyance rung in the buzzcut boy's voice. "C'mon man, talk to me. It's the least you can do after ditching me on the other end of the fucking city. What's your plan here?"
Sander's hand snagged on a jagged piece of glass, and the entire shattered window fell on him. He recovered his footing easily enough, taking his time shaking glass and dust out of his hair as he clung to the wall.
Ernie's voice chose that exact moment to blare through the cuff, and Sander's frown only deepened.
"I'm fighting." -He almost growled -"You stay put."
"I'm not gonna sit around while my friends are making dumbass decisions and putting themselves in unnecessary danger," Ernie spat back, summoning his rope to hop off the building safely. There were no civilians in the area to witness it, thanks to the ice giant, "If you seriously feel the need to babysit me even during the end of D.C. then just ask for my location and I'll give it to you. It's not like you can stop me right now, the way you're heading. Are you going after the crusher or the slime?"
"The what?"
Jesus, was this guy for real? Ernie jogged down the road, his head trying to juggle the conversation and his current task. The area by the arboretum was mostly residential, which meant that there'd be family homes. Which meant children. Which meant scooters and bikes.
"The air crusher who's summoning grey lines and turning buildings into literal dust. Entire guard towers and jet planes. It's calculated. This guy knows what he's doing so don't just charge in with zero plan."
"Oh." -Sander mumbled, heaved himself onto another rooftop. From there, he finally got clear view of the chaos bellow. In the distance, the slime monster kept moving, but he did notice the human silhouette floating in its mass.
"I see him." - Red eyes zeroed in on his target, and Sander couldn't help but sniff the air -"Brandy." -He whispered, almost as an afterthought. The last comment went unheard.
"Alright, what's he got surrounding him? Maybe you can knock a tower down and charge during the distraction or something."
"He's in slime." -Sander stated the obvious, fingers curled then uncurled as he fought the urge to charge.
"Fuck, really?" Ernie groaned as he sifted through an unlocked house, looking for the entrance to the garage. A check of the communicator confirmed Sander's location. Not far from Brent, which meant not far from the slime. Crap. "Whatever you do, don't touch that slime. Is Kadabra there too? Do you see what he's doing?"
"He's throwing stuffs."
Made sense. Ernie didn't know why he asked the obvious. "Use him as a distraction then. Remember, don't touch the slime."
Wait. There was something else about this. The guard towers had been systematically disabled. Strategic. This wasn't a random rogue. This was someone with a plan, with the aim to cripple the nation by striking at its heart. Ernie only knew of one organisation with the balls to do something so catastrophically large-scale.
"One more thing, Sander," the Aberration's tone was more serious than anything previous. More calculating. Entire corpses were always somewhat unnerving, like they could spring back to life when you had your back turned. But less than an entire corpse... "If you manage to beat this guy, see if you can bring his head back in one piece. The USARILN guys might be able to find something important."
The morbid request did make Sander quirk an eyebrow, but he simply nodded with a quick "Okay".
Ernie was pleasantly surprised by the lack of follow-up questions. Of course Sander of all people was alright with this sort of stuff. "Cool. Good luck then."
With that, the line cut. A scarf and pair of gardener gloves were procured to hide his glow. Armed with his soldier's uniform, a whistle and a Razor scooter, Ernie began making his way through the panicked throng.
As Ernieโs voice quieted, a lot seemed to be happening in the streets bellow. Yet, Sander chose not to observe, instead focusing his attention of the oozing slime and its human-shaped accomplice. Turning around, Sander dug his fingers into the concrete and ripped out a small section of the floor. With all his might, he launched it toward the human mage, already readying another follow-up attack.
A crushing field timed to eliminate Kadabra's projectiles took care of the new intrusion as well, though a sudden spray of lines around Sander's approximate position was enough clue that the mage had caught on to someone aiding the Precursor. The crisscross hatching of gray lines folded into and out of themselves for a brief second before piling inward towards a designated center point, one that Sander was dangerously near.
Ignoring the obvious telegraph around him, Sander merely reached for another slab of concrete.
The building around the Aberration vanished into a thin powder of wood and concrete dust, the inward implosion beyond anything a man-made object could withstand. With the disappearance of half a building, anyone within viewing distance would have seen the appalled look on the attacking mage's face when he saw a body falling to the ground below, unmarked by his devastating power. Fear and shock all rolled into a large, multilayered barricade of timed implosions, clearing out another wave of Kadabra's projectiles and much of the ground around them, forming a shallow moat that the slime oozed over easily.
More lines timed their detonations down the trajectory of Sander's fall, but every section of building turned to particulate matter still left an ominously glowing Aberration in its wake, entirely unfazed by the damage.
Sander hit the ground hard, cracks spreading like spiderwebs beneath him. Yet, he was unscathed, the force of the blows only fueled his fury. Seconds after his fall, and the blood mage was already back on his feet, scaling another building to get the height advantage on the slime creature.
Ernie's words still echoed in his head. Don't touch the slime. But how else would he get to the human mage?
Frustration gnawed as him, so he gave up and dove straight for the crusher, heedless of Ernie's sensible advice.
The slime swallowed him in a thick liquid that cut off air and hindered movement. Without any traction to push off of and only uncooperative slime to struggle against, Sander's movements bore little fruit. Meanwhile, the living ooze shifted further into itself, condensing carefully and keeping its empowered ally above the suffocating mass. At the same time, it pulled Sander deeper into its body, intending to confine his movements there.
With his air supply cut off and his strength neutralized, there was little Sander could do. He struggled in vain, feral growls bubbled from his throat, just as his lungs began to burn for oxygen. He fought uselessly, the slime contouring and deafening any shows of force deep within its body. While Sander was immune to the digestive effects, he wouldn't be able to withstand the lack of air for long.
Finally reaching the others, Zoe wasn't sure how much she had left in her. Between the pain, the bleeding, and the constant temptation that accompanied the regulars' screaming, even the short climb to the fourth floor had felt like a monumental task. Still, she'd made it in one piece, pushing open the door just in time to see the concrete rain down on her teammates. Perhaps if she was in a better place, she would have waited to see if they were injured, but that was the last thing she wanted to know. Kadabra's sudden appearance was briefly reassuring, but it didn't seem like he was doing too much damage. She glanced back towards the others, looking for a second like she was about to lunge at them.
Can't hurt them. Don't lose it. The others can't kill the slime, they need you to kill the slime--
And that thought brought a strange clarity, like she was watching from somewhere else. Of course, they needed her to kill the slime. Watching with a slight smile as their allies' projectiles were crushed, Zoe's voice took on an almost eerie calm as she approached their makeshift projectile, a stark contrast to the barely-restrained bloodlust from seconds before. "Fire into the nearest veins. I can keep affecting it from there, and anything else'll get crushed." No, not just calm. Predatory. "Can't afford to take our time anymore."
Concrete shattered upon the spotter team as the situation devolved further, stone shards striking Brent's back and helmet as he turned away from the sudden telekinetic explosion of Kadabra. Of course the Precursor would focus his attention here, now that the ice giant was gone. Of course the crusher mage was now soaking themself in the slime, using it as an omnidirectional shield. Of course the slime could scramble its own organs like fucking nothing. Of course it could increase density too, making it all the tougher to punch through, while turning their five stories of safety useless, as the slime grew taller and taller.
His helmet, at least, saved him from getting knocked out by an errant piece of rubble. Head snapping to the side, Brent stumbled away from the edge of the wall, shaking the stars out of his vision. Zoe had appeared during that hailstorm, and, thoughts still occupied by the maelstrom of events that were happening all at once, the arbiter didn't have any time at all to be wondering about her mental state. Her words made sense and she wasn't trying to kill them yet. That's all that mattered.
"Crusher will definitely counter once the spear is fired," Brent said, pulling out a handgun, "I'll put him down, or, at least, distract him."
Distract him long enough, perhaps, that Kadabra could fully bury that bastard in a moment of weakness.
"Allison, can you seal their powers?"
"I..." Allison hesitated for a moment. It wasn't exactly a good idea, but stabbing the slime was better than nothing. Plus is would do more to sate Allison's stigma than cutting a wall or some cords. If it worked, Allison would probably be out cold, which was better than dead. She had to do it. So much for avoiding reckless actions. "Yes. I can do it."
Brent met Allison's gaze, holding it for a moment, trying to tell how much of what she said was confidence and how much of it was due to appeasement. He never really was good at judging moods though, nor was he skilled at reading faces. Ultimately, it came down to trust, and the arbiter averted his gaze towards the pulsating slime that edged ever closer to their location. Trust that Allison's maneveur actually had some beneficial value. Trust that Gregory's aim was true. Trust that Zoe remained in control and picked her targets well even amidst the mind-numbing sadism of the stigma.
His finger pressed hard against the side of his gun.
"Gregory, set up your shot. You'll be the one to do the countdown. Allison, activate your sword when he calls it. Zoe, do what you can. I'll be firing immediately afterwards." The ideal situation was that both the slime and the crusher were killed within seconds of each other, no counterattack possible. But nothing worked out well when he was involved. "If the crusher is up but the slime is dead, we run. Separate directions. Sander can take care of him. If the slime is up and the crusher is dead, we're fine. If both are still up, we're basically fucked."
"So yeah, Grego, aim well." Brent smiled, though his tone took a sarcastic shift. "No pressure."
Great... He'd have liked to just bail when Kadabra showed up and started tearing the city block to pieces, but he didn't imagine getting far on his own. Now Chris and Sander had thrown themselves into the slime to be dissolved as well, and while he didn't particularly care about either of them, their value as Subnaturals were somewhere between mountains and the sky above his own. Grinding his teeth together as he tossed the projectile up once, Gregory shook his head, and flipped Brent off. "Yeah, thanks. All of you might want to get away from me. And if it doesn't go deep enough, slash the slime." He couldn't really call the timing when he had no idea what the effect might be.
Giving the others a few moments to back off, Gregory pulled and felt the unused power respond as the projectile suspended itself in the air. Wincing at the glow it gave off and hoping neither slime nor crusher noticed, he left a line behind him as he ran, flicking it slightly to the right just at the end to readjust his aim and hopefully send it accurately into the slime. Keeping his head low as the projectile flew overhead, he could only hope that by some miracle it was enough. Cause it damn well needed one.
Fuck, would it kill that tranny to listen for once?
The gun in Brent's hand writhed like a living thing as silver circuitry consumed it, transformed it as quickly as possible. From an explosion of individual parts to the scalding wind to the tortured screeches, the arbiter gave up on the idea of stealth as he approached the edge, one step away from the gelatinous mass of the slime monster.
In his hands was a railgun, gunmetal black with electric blue highlights, overclocked for the devastating speed and destructive force. It was going to hurt, regardless of the fact that no gunpowder was involved. In his mind's eye, he could already imagine the gun melting away after the first and only shot, burning the skin off his finger.
But it was fine. If the crusher died, they lived. Sacrificing a hand or two was fine.
Sights centered, Brent fired and prayed his classmates followed up.
The moment she felt the projectile make contact with the creature, Zoe's expression changed into something close to ecstacy. The wait was finally over. It had been a good effort, making it this far, but to tell the truth she was long gone. Worse, there was a sick kind of intelligence that had allowed her to wait for this long. if she couldn't kill this thing, if the connection was lost for any reason... Well, the way she saw it they couldn't really afford to take her out.
They were in danger here, and some of them didn't need to be. Already knew they wouldn't just leave on her say-so, and instead of trying to talk things out she simply reached out her power towards Allison and Gregory. The skin on their arms, shoulders, backs, slowly beginning to break down. There wouldn't be any serious damage - she was keeping it to the surface this time - but they didn't have to know that. "You guys really should get going." Almost conversational. "It's dangerous up here."
A part of her realised how warped this protective instinct was, but if they couldn't win the fight then she wanted to minimise casualties. Allison and Greg weren't needed to finish this, and if they stuck around they'd be just as likely to die. Zoe was trying to look out for them in her own fucked-up way, but that wouldn't really be apparent as the girl turned back to the slime and started stretching her powers towards its heart.
Allison didn't hear Zoe's horrifying warning, she barely even felt her flesh beginning to rot away. Instead, her focus remained on the monster and the massive blade that suddenly appeared in her hand. There was no turning back. Allison had summoned the shard to be as long as she could get it and threw her arm forward to deliver the weapon to the blob.
Meanwhile, Sander was staring blankly at the distance shape of his target, just as the slime pulled him deeper into his death. His lungs burnt, and for once, it wasnโt the intoxicating fire of his power. This was death. He was dying.
What did she say, before?
Be careful what you wish for. Because you just might get it.
Sander took another moment to choke on the irony of his situation, before that line of thought was cut completely. He began flailing again, this time less out of murderous intents and more of desperate instincts, His vision blurred, and the fire in his chest flared brightly, warning.
And waning.
It didnโt want to die. Curiously, neither did he. No. He wouldnโt die. He didnโt want to. Christmas was waiting for him somewhere above the surface. He needed to come back.
He would.
Sander closed his eyes then, and for the first time since he left the Facility, he lost himself fully. The fire crackled in its victory.
The blood mage began to tear his way up, mouth opened in a soundless snarl. His red eyes was set on the crusher mage again, and he didnโt intend to hold back this time.
The truck moved onwards, travelling steadily and pushing past stilled cars with ease. Though the presence of subnaturals was made evident by the golden chains attached to the plow at the front, the citizens were hesitant to engage. Some stood by and made room while others fled. Apart from the occasional rock smacking the side of the vehicle, there were no further attacks made on the truck itself. Engaging a vehicle moving at that speed was universally acknowledged to be a rather foolhardy plan.
Up the road, a significant roadblock could be sighted. Several buildings had been collapsed by the tremors of the ice giant's fall, crushing the cars underneath and creating a mound that reached across the evacuation route. The rubble itself was nothing the truck's thick tires couldn't handle though that wasn't the only point of interest. Citizens that were moving on foot merely climbed over the mound, eager to escape the city, much to the chagrin of the less mobile. A handful of bloodied regulars remained by the former apartments, attempting to dig through the debris or just watching on worriedly. Cries for help sounded from the bystanders and from within the broken condo. Nearby, seven soldiers were arranged on the street, too busy with the evacuation process to properly lend their assistance to those trapped underneath.
The awkward silence that had passed during the steady crawl of the truck was not unnoticed by Marcus. Normally, he would have been the one to step up and break the tense atmosphere, but this time he didn't. He just didn't have the energy. Everything that had happened back there had been playing in his mind on a loop since he climbed back into the cab, and the sheer mental fortitude he was expending to not just break down and panic was physically exhausting him.
He was tired. That much was obvious, and it probably showed.
Combined with the fact that there was likely nothing he could say that wouldn't make the situation worse, kept his mouth shut. For he feared that if he opened it, he'd lash out at someone - hurt somebody else, even if unintentionally. A small part of him chuckled at the thought: his mother's child, for sure.
Quiet. It was not the unnatural type of silence that Siena was accustomed to--the sound of the road passing beneath them, the sound of the distant mayhem...it was still there. Muffled and oddly sliding over her as though she wasn't quite there. She imagined the others were thinking of the prior events--no, it was more of a faded hope. At least if she imagined that they were doing something that human, the illusion could still pass. Siena felt her grip tighten marginally around her phone, hazy screams filling the back of her head like a nest of angry hornets.
So many dead.
A disappointed voice sounded like an echo. Over and over again. Didn't she learn better? She flinched, let go of the cars. Her fault. She didn't fight back the way she should have, had to be saved when she could have--a shudder passed down her spine. Almost. Only a few breaths away from taking a name that she knew should not be taken. Not when it fit so easily, and not when she was so comfortable without control.
The only time you feel like yourself, abomination.
Her eyes returned to the streets.
"Ah, shit."
The semi slowly stopped in front of what appeared to be an insurmountable obstacle in their path; an entire block was currently sprawled out over the road, with civilians scurrying about it as if from a disturbed ant mound. Even after everything that had happened - he wasn't willing to just drive over the people running for their lives.
"Welp. Look's like we're walking." he said, very matter-of-factly.
Some of the others in the back would certainly disagree, he knew that much when he stopped the truck. They'd say he should just plow through them and not think twice.
Fortunately, they weren't the ones with the keys.
As the truck came to a stop Kusari exited it and walked to the front. Their path was blocked as Marcus said, they would have to walk. She glanced around seeing people in various states of disarray. The thought didn't even cross her mind to help them, not after what just happened. She quietly walked forward, tuning out the chaos around her.
Angรฉlique was of no exception for contributing to the uncomfortable silence in the truck. Her moody but talkative attitude was replaced by a brooding silence as she kept to herself, her mind plagued by the guilt of the situation she had caused and the ungrateful behavior of the Regulars she wanted to save. When the truck came to a stop, Angel thought they had finally arrived to destination, but wanted to stay put until told to get out. Watching Kusari leave and the landscape view offered from the entrance to the van, it seemed to point otherwise. Curious, the raven-haired Subnatural slowly crawled towards the exit of the truck's cargo holder, sitting at the edge of the doors' frame. The road was a mess, the surroundings showed signs of clear devastation. And yet, despite the wails and cries for help, Angel felt unmoved by this catastrophe. Sure, part of herself felt for the refugees and their pleas for rescue, but the fallen idol was so weary and tired of this ordeal, and was still mad over what happened earlier. She was in no state of mind to suggest anything or take decisions, and she realized it by now. Instead, she simply stood still, waiting for whomever else to take charge and direct the group into their next course of action. It wasn't like she was going anywhere by herself with her current state of health anyway.
Lily wordlessly and absentmindedly followed after both Kusari and Angelique and got out of the truck. With her mind blank, she looked at her surroundings and began walking.
Siena's feet hit the ground with a faint crunch of misplaced rocks grinding under her feet, the discomfort little more than a distraction from what assaulted her senses. Again, there were people that needed help. A sense of apprehension rose like the tide, creeping from her stomach, up to her torso, until it threatened to drown her in its presence. Again. Her grip tightened again around her phone.
Why didn't they move to help?
Because they weren't stupid, a bitter voice spat with such venom that Siena felt an odd desire to flinch. They had every right not to be willing to help, and the Arbiter knew it. It was a perfectly human reaction. Her mind continued to rationalize it as her eyes remained glued on the disaster, a storm of conflicting emotions trying to win out again. Guilt, remorse, anger, bitterness, hate, hurt, guilt, guilt, guilt.
She did not walk forward like the others.
"We're leaving them...?" It wasn't really a question, Siena realized. Just an attempt to seek confirmation.
The other were silent. Emma was silent too, but her face held none of the emotion that the otherโs had. She didnโt look tired, or sullen, or angry, or sad, or guilty, instead she just lookedโฆ she looked like her mom always had, she realized. Her face said nothing, her mouth was drawn into a line, her eyes were justโฆ they were just there. There, like she was, at this moment doing nothing else either than existing.
Aside from her bruised face she looked so normal that it was unsettling even for her. But she didnโt feel normal, did she?
Wordlessly she followed the others out of the truck, climbing out to drink in the destruction around her. There were people, trapped, her friends, such as they were, not moving to help them. She couldnโt blame themโฆ could she? It was Siena that asked. Emma didnโt say anything, not at first. First Determination appeared. By some miracle he was still here for her and maybe that meant something.
Probably not, she decided.
โHelp them get out of the rubble.โ Emma said evenly, gesturing off handedly towards the trapped civilians. He started on his task after a moment of contemplation, and she walked beside him, starting to help dig herself as effectively as she could.
As the incapacitated USARILN guards filed out behind Kusari and Angel, murmurs surrounding Determination's approach started filling the air. The atmosphere still reeked of desperation from the citizens clambering over the mound but there was much less animosity. It mostly likely had something to do with the heavily armed guards glowering at the scene, or the blood splattering many of the teenagers' clothing.
A young man in a dust-coated sweater kept his distance from the subnaturals, glaring at the X-girl from TV.
"Hey, stay awa--" he started before getting harshly cut-off by an older woman.
"Let them help."
"But they fucking started--"
"How else are we going to find Leah?" the woman's voice broke with the name. A glare full of contempt was levelled at the subnaturals and she nodded to the apartment building. "I don't know how many are still in there. Just fix it. It's the least you can do after all this."
Emma didnโt look up at them. โSorry.โ She muttered under her breath, continuing to dig, straining herself to dig.
After what had happened so soon ago Kusari thought that she had run out of desire to be angry, but thinking about it she never said a word to the people attacking her and her allies. As far as she was concerned they were just targets that she was defending herself from. However she wasn't in combat right now, and the words of this ignorant regular crawled under her skin like centipedes.
Kusari swiftly walked over to Determination and nonchalantly stabbed it in the back of it's head with her claw. She affixed a glare as sharp as a surgeon's knife to the woman that had slighted them. "You heard the woman Emma. We caused this whole mess, right?" She spread her arms with open hands and let out a sardonic chuckle. "Wouldn't make much sense for us to care about saving anyone, right? In fact how fucking DARE we even think of helping these pure innocent humans? They don't need help from a bunch of monsters." Kusari had a trembling smile on her face, as if she didn't know what expression to convey other than mockery and defiance.
"As a matter of fact." Kusari looked to Emma. "I think they would much rather die than live with the shame of being saved by a sub."
Emma didnโt move from her task. She didnโt look up either. Instead, she said a single word.
โStop.โ
It wasnโt much of a response but Emma said it very seriously. Determination appeared again. โKeep digging.โ
Kusari's uneasy smile had settled into a firm grimace. "Oh? I should stop? That's funny, I didn't hear you say that when those regulars were trying to do a public execution."
From a few feet away, Lily watched and listened silently at how Kusari lashed out a Regular. The small blonde Aberration merely stared, neither registering the hatred she heard in the pale Arbiter's voice nor the determination Emma showed in helping out.
Only one real denial came to Siena's inquiry, one quickly met with an equally real confirmation. The rational part of her mind...no, the idealistic part of her mind told her that they both had their reasons. Good reasons, bad reasons, it didn't matter. The brunette knew that Kusari's reaction was probably the more natural. They had been attacked for announcing their presence, for trying to help, and that had been before the bloodshed. A bitter voice hissed in agitation through the din of Siena's thoughts. Why keep trying to find excuses?
Her grip tightened on her phone marginally.
"So you're saying we should condemn all of them?" The words escaped before the usual filter could clamp down. Well, too late to stop. "If you don't want to help, at least don't interfere with the ones that do want to." Because she didn't have the strength to keep up the facade. Looking over the building, Siena took a wary step toward the building, her gaze falling to the screen of her phone, a purple light dimly coming to life.
Just fix it.
Kusari wasn't expecting Siena to speak up, she hadn't spoken to her since the flag game but she'd always seemed like the type to keep down when possible. She knew what she was doing was ridiculous, she was trying to convince them to let people die after all. She was just beyond caring at this point.
"If they didn't need us right now they would be fine with all of us dropping dead on the spot, I hope you understand that." She didn't destroy Emma's creature again, but she didn't continue walking either. Regardless of what they wanted to do she wasn't going to leave without them.
Movement inside the truck caught Angelโs attention, looking back the guards began leaving the truck one by one, until Lawrence showed up last. It looks like he finally woke up. After making sure he was alright from the fall he took earlier, both Mages agreed to help each other out from the vehicle, joining the others as they realized the reason they stopped. A roadblock created by a collapsed building. Well, that was quite the hurdle. They would need to go back to the evacuation point with their own legs, leaving them exposed to the mad crowd of panicked citizens.
Moving further forward to join the others, the two oldest Mages from Unit B reached them while they were quarrelling about helping the Regulars. Again, the dilemma was still going strong in Angรฉliqueโs mind, her idealistic and hopeful self was agreeing with Siena. But after going through so much shit earlier, she was mostly inclined to agree with Kusari. They tried helping earlier and they got stoned for it. Why would it be different this time? First chance they would get, the Regular would stab them in the back.
So she simply stood there, requesting Lawrence to leave her be if he wanted to contribute to the unearthing effort. Meanwhile, Angel was simply sitting on a toppled piece of building, her tired gaze looking over her classmates. There wasnโt much she could do to help even if she wanted to, and she sure as hell didnโt want using her voice to call out for survivors. Not this time.
Emma didnโt say anything. She didnโt look up, she didnโt stop, her expression didnโt change. She just kept digging. Kusariโs words werenโt news to her- in fact, it was something that she knew very well. But she couldnโt find fault with their position. She couldnโt fault Regulars for wanting them dead.
So she kept digging.
Grey eyes did not lift from the phone screen as she listened to Kusari. Well, that had always been the case, hadn't it? Hadn't that been abundantly clear the first time that they were thrown haphazardly into combat? Unwelcome thoughts of Padma's death tried to encroach, but were quickly pushed aside. It wasn't the time for that. A name settled over her, and she braced herself for the storm that would brew. Siena had never quite settled in line with any version of Shadowcat before--not the same way she did with other names.
"Then we should make ourselves needed."
Unease gripped the civilians as the heated disagreement went on. Despite the albino's hostility, her words held a dirty truth to them. Had the places been switched, there would have been zero chance of anyone at the scene coming to the subnaturals' aid. Getting saved by these inhumans might be considered degrading by some, but it seemed that the regulars were all too desperate despite that.
The man that had dismissed them earlier remained silent, instead moving beside Emma to assist and direct her efforts.
"Can't you get more of your guys to help?" he muttered after a while, gesturing to Determination. He'd obviously taken note of the description of her power from her interview.
The woman was not quite as graceless as her counterpart, turning to Siena with a reluctant but appreciative nod. "This was a ten-storey condo. All those apartments on a midday Sunday... I can't even guess how many could be trapped down there."
โRight.โ Emma wasnโt sure why herself why she didnโt summon more tulpas. Well, that wasnโt true, she knew why, but wasnโt willing to admit to herself that she wasnโt thinking straight. Charity and Devotion came. Love mightโve been helpful butโฆ
โSearch for survivors and dig them out.โ Emma commanded simply.
Lily's golden eyes remained on Emma and her mind was jolted back alive. She had been like that before, always wanting to help. But did it matter now when she killed people she was supposed to have saved? And to make matters worse, they had already been incapacitated by Angelique. No matter how much she denied it, no matter how much she blamed her stigma, the act of killing made her feel both sane and insane at the same time. The feeling was...euphoric. But it only lasted a fraction of a second before she felt horrible. Nothing will change the fact that she was a monster. And a monster should be put down. And if these people would put her down, she'd let them. She tuned out the injuries she could sense. There was no point trying to be a healer when she was just really a murderer. With a sigh, she let her mind shut down again as her legs carried her over to where Emma and the man were digging. Silently, she began helping out even though she could still feel the exhaustion, her small hands doing the best they could.
At the acknowledgement that the remains before them had once been a condo, Siena couldn't help but feel her expression try to twist into a grimace. Part of the expression seeped through against her best attempts, the wince at the potential number of injured and dead. How many had even survived when the building crashed into its current position...? Taking a deep breath, the brunette gave a nod.
"I'll bring as many to safety as I can," Siena started while her mind ran through a series of situations. She could take a second name, but based on experience, it would dampen her ability to quickly move through the building for a first sweep...worse yet, it might entirely prevent her from taking anyone that could escape with her. Besides which, there were too many variables in trying to take a name that could scan for people that she didn't know. "If I find any medical supplies, I'll bring those out too."
Taking a deep breath, the brunette moved toward the rubble. Another deep breath that she didn't release, and she plunged through it.
Marcus had said nothing during the argument between Kusari and Emma, but had taken a quick step forward when the clawed girl slashed through the tulpa's head. Not helping was one thing, but actively preventing someone from helping was another thing altogether. Even so, he couldn't bring himself to intervene, and let out a soft sigh when the situation appeared defused.
He listened to the other conversations: the man directing Emma and the woman talking about the building. Condos weren't usually built to last, but in the capital, Marcus guessed that every building had some safe room for when things went poorly. Plus, if they had survived their fall, other rooms could have been equally protected.
He wandered around the rubble a bit, looking for something that would allow him into the building. Some partially destroyed doorway, or semi collapsed hall. Easy enough to find - there was enough fallen walls to allow him easy access to the interior.
Even from the outside, Marcus could tell that the building was not stable. Dust shook from the ceiling, the echoing sound of some rocks finally giving way and clattering to the ground, all drowned beneath the cries for help from the survivors. It was probably too dangerous for more than one person to sneak around without triggering another collapse.
Perhaps that's why he didn't tell anyone as he silently slipped in.
Help save the kinds of people who had wanted them dead earlier, or keep going and leave those in need behind so they could save themselves. From what Sophia could see, the majority opinion had won out and they were helping. There was that shadowy creature moving rubble, and Siena had just... disappeared. Would Siena be okay?
Sophia stood near the back of the truck, leaning against the side of the truck with one arm hooked around the door to steady herself as she looked at the rubble ahead of them. She still wasn't feeling back to normal and would probably have to sit back down in the truck soon, but had wanted to see what was going on when the truck had stopped and her classmates had begun to get out. Well, now she knew.
All that death... She should help somehow, but how? Emma had her creatures, Siena had used some power to disappear into that rubble, Kusari... well, she wasn't really doing anything, Marcus was out of sight but probably helping too... Sophia could use her power, but was she strong enough? Last time she had tried she hadn't been able to see through much, and here were layers upon layers of rubble. If she couldn't see through enough of the rubble, there was no point in turning her power on when it would only make seeing the living harder. She let out a shaky breath, and feeling that she had stood for long enough, went back into the truck to sit at the edge. What should I do?
A light shower of rubble brushed Marcus' shoulder as he entered the dark and ruined hall. Only half of the ground floor seemed intact enough to navigate, the division between the untouched rooms and crushed areas being difficult to ascertain. A distant wailing could be heard down the corridor. A sole civilian who still had the strength to cry out an hour after the initial tremors. The Arbiter's footsteps were met with a subtle crackling from the ceiling, but it seemed safe enough to enter for now.
Meanwhile, with its superior strength, Determination unearthed a middle-aged couple, bystanders quickly rushing in to help them out while the tulpa continued its task. Closer to Siena, a pair of small figures lay together in the dark, the boy gasping softly as the white-marked girl reached their cramped chamber.
Marcus carefully tread down the corridor, the small streams of light pouring through cracks in the building offering just enough visibility to not stumble blindly through the darkness. He paused for a moment, his breath hitching in his throat as the very tension around him seemed to crack, mimicking the noises from the rubble above him. The sensible part of him screamed to go back out towards the light; the safety of the truck, but he pressed on. He was the face of subnaturals now. If he wasn't willing to risk anything to help...well, he'd be awfully disappointed in himself.
"Hello!?" Marcus shouted, his voice slightly muffled by his own shirt, which he had pulled across his nose. He'd heard a voice - he just needed to know where it was coming from.
A silence before a croaked, "H-here!" echoed through the silence. Two doors down from Marcus, a woman was pinned by her left side, a rebar deeply grazing her free but bloodied leg.
Marcus's attention snapped to the doorway, and he gingerly made his way to the room, peeking in for a second to assess the danger. One woman, injured, but alive. He made his way over to her, kneeling down to offer a shoulder to lean on.
"How bad is it?" he asked in a light whisper - as if he was afraid any louder would bring the building down on them.
"I-I can't move my arm," she mumbled through tears of relief, "My leg's killing me but... I... I can walk if you get me out."
"Alright, throw your good arm around my shoulder - I'll get you out of here." he said, extending his arm to pull her to her foot - ready for the possibility of her immediately stumbling on her injury.
The woman obliged eagerly, leaning on Marcus as they shuffled out together. It was a slow but arduous process, her leg occasionally giving out at moments and tremors from the helpers above promising a full collapse at any time. But the entrance came into view before any more tragedy could befall them. They made it out alive.
Marcus walked her the entirety of the way out of the building, finally releasing her once he was sure the duo were far enough away from the building to avoid any sudden shifts. He took a few moments to catch his breath, pulling down his shirt to welcome in the sweet dustless air, before turning to look back at the entrance they'd come out of.
"You don't happen to know of any safe rooms, do you? Any places that people might be holed up down there?"
Two civilians arrived to help the woman away. She breathed heavily. "Past the elevator there should be a blue door. I wouldn't count on a lot of people being in there but... thank you, Time Scar...Marc."
A small but genuine smile cut through the dust caking her face.
Marcus said nothing, slightly taken off guard by the recognition. Instead, he just smiled softly, giving her a slight nod, which was quickly obscured as he pulled his shirt back over his face.
No time to rest - not while there were still people inside.
The elevator was easy enough to find, some loosely hanging signs still pointing directions through the crumbling passageways. Marcus walked slowly - it felt like every step he was taking was a gamble here, but he wasn't worrying about the odds. He would have almost missed the blue door had it not been for a stream of light; the dust that clouded and settled over everything made it seem more beige than blue.
"Hello? Anybody inside?" Marcus spoke up, leaning his head close to the door to try and hear a response. "Evacuation team - here to help!"
The door opened an inch but quickly shut again as an unnerving amount of rubble toppled with the small movement.
"Seven of us. I don't...it doesn't look safe to come out," a male voice emerged from behind the partition.
Marcus took a step back as rubble poured from the cieling. The man was right - it certainly didn't look safe to come out this way; but it certainly wasn't any safer to stay here and wait for the building to come down.
"Is there a back exit in there? Any gap that you can crawl through instead?"
"Not really. Half the room's been collapsed and I don't want to test our chances by dislodging anything."
Marcus mentally cursed, sighing to himself.
"Well, I guess this is our only option then. Is there anything in there you can hide underneath while I try to get this door open?"
"There's a meeting table. I think that'll work." Some shuffling noises sounded from the door. "Alright, everyone's under."
"Alright - get ready." Marcus said, although one could be forgiven for thinking that he was talking to himself in this instance. He grabbed the door, gently pulling on it, trying to open it inch by agonzing inch, waiting to see the scale of rubble collapse before proceeding any further.
Head and fist-sized rocks continued plummeting for a few seconds but ceased after a short while. One by one the inhabitants of the safe room filed out, all of them warily eyeing the space above the broken doorframe. A man in business attire came out last, his eyes narrowing at Marcus' white streak but ultimately giving the boy an appreciative "thanks; lead the way".
When the partial collapse stopped, Marcus let out a breath that he didn't realize he'd been holding. One by one, survivors started filing out, the seventh being a professional-looking business man. If Marcus noticed the man's eyes narrow in the dark, he didn't bother saying anything about it.
"Alright, single file - try to spread out a little bit so we're not putting too much weight on any section of this." Marcus said, looking over his motley little group of evacuees, and turning to lead the way back to the entrance, acutely aware of the constant sounds of shifting rock.
There was a fortunate side to the dust that settled everywhere; his own footprints were easy enough to follow back - a little trick he noticed at the first hallway intersection he came to. He'd not even bothered to try and remember his path - a mental mistake that he jotted down in his head to avoid in the future.
They walked as instructed, spreading out and treading with muted steps. The man at the end supported another who seemed to have a sprained ankle, the injured one's arm slung over the businessman's shoulder. They rested for a moment, the one with the bad ankle stretching out his hand to lean against the wall. A mistake.
The tremors began again, the rocky ceiling rumbling dangerously and alerting the evacuees. The teen at the front sprinted towards the exit despite Marcus' instructions, heavy footsteps only exacerbating the panic taking hold. Frozen with uncertainty, the remaining six looked to the Arbiter for guidance, looking as if they too would bolt at any second.
Marcus almost shouted something at the teen who fled, but stopped - himself frozen in his own uncertainty as the ceiling seemed to growl at them. His eyes darted from falling rubble, to group of people, to the exit. The imminent panic was almost palpable, and Marcus's own heart was starting to pound incessantly in his chest.
"Exit's right there; everyone go. Keep single file, and walk carefully. If you run, you're going to kill us all." he said, his tone unreadable. He gingerly stepped past the line as the moved down the hall, coming to the businessman and the injured man.
"Here, you grab his legs, I'll grab his torso - it'll be faster this way."
The threat of death in the subnatural's words overruled the irrationality prompted by fear. Nodding intermittently, they moved and were eventually helped out by other civilians as they reached the exit.
"Shit," the limping man swore as his companion in the suit crouched to carry his legs as commanded, "No. Get out."
"Shut up, Ty," his friend scoffed jokingly, rolling his eyes at Tyson's feeble attempts to wave him away.
The rumbling only intensified, sending larger pieces of debris tumbling down. Too big. Too close.
A piece about the size of a cooler plummeted towards the three remaining. Too big. Too fast. Tyson tumbled forward, shoving the man in the suit out of danger with a surprising burst of energy. A morbid scream rung out as his torso was subsequently struck by concrete. His friend watched in horror. He wasn't dead yet but there was no way he'd be able to leave with that concrete on his body. It was impossible to guess how much time they still had before the hallway collapsed completely. The businessman seemed torn between leaving or staying to unearth the other. A desperate glance was directed at Marcus.
Marcus nearly stumbled backwards as the concrete slammed into the man, pinning him to the ground. Without a second thought, Marcus knelt down, attempting to unbury the man, disregarding any attempts to do so without further injury in place of getting it done quickly. The piece of building shifted slightly, and Marcus continued to push, giving a quick "Go! I've got him!" to the man in the suit.
His order went unheeded and the businessman surged forward, pulling as Marcus pushed. The concrete was dislodged but continued raining from above. A hefty piece battered Marcus' shoulder, effectively breaking it just as Tyson was freed. The businessman was similarly struck, blood beginning to poor from the side of his face as it was grazed.
"What the fuck, man..." Tyson's words were slurred as his arm returned to its place across the suited man's shoulder.
"C'mon, Time Scar!" the businessman shouted and half-dragged Tyson towards the exit.
But Marcus wouldn't have the opportunity to oblige.
The concrete hail gave one final surge, the ceiling falling between the two civilians and the Arbiter. All seven evacuees successfully escaped at the cost of their rescuer.
A sharp cry of pain escaped from Marcus's mouth at the same time the sickening sound of breaking bone sounded, the rubble that struck him throwing him off balance. However, the sound of static, the clatter of rubble making it only audible to him sounded, knitted his shoulder back into place. By this time however, he had just enough of a window to watch the last of the evacuees make their way to the exit before a concrete barrier came down between them.
And just like that, the rumbling stopped. The clatter of stones trickled for a little longer, the dust began to settle over him, darkening his hair to a muted gray, and he found himself trapped.
When Siena emerged on the other side of the wall, her eyes were quick to acknowledge the fact that there wasn't quite enough light to see clearly. A few colors burst in the center of her vision in an attempt to adjust while the brunette tried to blink the distractions away. Releasing her breath, Siena tried to assess the situation at hand. While she'd taken an early enough version of her mark to maximize efficiency and time, that didn't mean the Arbiter could spend too much standing and waiting for something to come to her.
"If anyone can hear me, I'm here to help!" The girl called while starting to walk. Maybe she should have done some scanning of the building before running in...but she couldn't stand outside with the others for long. She didn't bother asking if anyone was there. Of course there were people there...but how capable they were of responding was another matter entirely.
A child's voice, weak and not quite forming coherent words. It came from a boy trapped by rubble completely covering his legs\. His hand was clasped with that of an apparently unconscious girl beside him, similarly pinned.
Had Siena not been listening for the sounds of human voices, she might have missed the one that responded. Following it to its source wasn't the challenge, it was what she found. Children trapped beneath the rubble. How many weren't so fortunate? The brunette hid the increasingly chaotic medley of emotions with a careful, gentle smile that she'd seen on Maya's face at least a hundred times before. Not one that was there because it wanted to be there, one that was better suited for comfort...or something.
"You've been very brave." The brunette grimaced internally at the words, but she didn't know how to handle children. Hell, if not for the white mark on her face, she would barely have been considered as more than one--the thought triggered memories of another child that had come and gone.
The smile did not falter. Could not, because she needed the mask just as much.
"Are you two siblings?" Siena questioned while examining the rubble. They were small, and if it was just their legs, then freeing them would be easy enough. Getting them out, on the other hand...well, first thing was first. "Do you know if she hit her head?"
The boy's hand tightened instinctively when Siena's white mark came into view. A shake of the head for the first question then, "..I don't know. I didn't see. I woke up before her b-but she won't say anything!"
Uncertainty was never really a good thing when it came as far as rescues. A flash of a concerned expression cracked the brave face that Siena knew she had to keep wearing. Maybe she should have taken a second name? There were many that could help for her purposes, but without a good view beyond the walls, was it too dangerous? The thoughts escalated, filling each part of the brunette with anxiety, even as she knelt beside the two.
"It's okay. I'm going to get you out first then, but to do that, I'm going to need to pick you up. Is that okay with you?" A soft tone. The same one that Maya had used when a much younger Santana would run to her over nightmares. "Do you read comics? It's going to be kind of like what Kitty Pryde does in X-Men."
A shaky nod. "Yeah, I know her." He reached his hands out to make it easier for Siena, wistfully glancing at the girl beside him as he let go.
If it was surprising for Siena to see someone reaching out for her, she didn't let it show on her face. Carefully taking the boy's hands into her own, the brunette took a careful breath, then worked Shadowcat's magic. A bitter thought tried to surface in the back of her mind--why are you trying so hard?--but it was stamped out by a tidal wave of other thoughts. Carefully, she let the rocks phase through her charge before starting to free him from his rocky confines. "Do you think you'll be able to stand?"
"Y-yeah," the boy leaned heavily against his rescuer before finally stabilising.
So far so good. Siena carefully led the boy a few steps from the pile of rubble, to ensure that he wasn't still in danger of fusing with any of it, before allowing the intangibility to fade. Remaining in place for a moment longer, the Arbiter glanced at the girl beneath the rubble. Again, the terrifyingly calm part of her rose. There was no way to make a better plan without a clear and enough authority to have the panicked civilians actually listen to her and clear a space. Too risky to try and manage a delicate teleportation when there was so much lying outside...but she did have a way to contact the others...right? "Transmit. If anyone outside can hear this, there's a girl here that might have a concussion. I'm going to bring her out, but she needs immediate medical attention if she has any head trauma. Over."
A pause.
"Do you think you can support her head? I don't want to hurt her while we free her."
The boy did as he was told, his hand momentarily pulling back when he noticed the unnervingly large amount of blood coating his fingers as he braced her. He steeled himself anyway and did his job, looking to Siena for further instruction.
Kneeling beside the boy, Siena was prepared to show him what she remembered from countless first aid diagrams. The images were hazy, but how many times had she looked up rescues for the sake of readers she'd never see? After all, heroes like the Precursors wouldn't be so reckless in a rescue. First, in a situation this dire...for a moment her mind refused to conjure the answer. A cold, heavy ball of panic dropped to the pit of her stomach. Alright, if the researched answers weren't going to come to her first, then it would be the immediate ones. Pulse, airway, and...?
'Focus, you idiot.'
"Let's see what we can find out about--" A few slender digits touched against the carotid artery. The skin was still warm, but she felt nothing. "N-No..." Maybe she had the wrong spot. Maybe she was just imagining that it wasn't there. Her hand recoiled faintly, but the mage bit her lip and checked again. Nothing. It felt as though her own heart had stopped for a moment. Had she been alive when Siena arrived? If she'd freed the girl first, been more aggressive in her rescue instead of panicking over the safety and risks, would the girl have been saved?
Something hot pricked at the back of the brunette's eyes and she took a shaky breath. Be brave. "I'm so sorry..." Because the body was still warm. Because that girl might have survived if only Siena had taken a better route.
"Transmit. I've checked the victim's vitals. They're...she...." A sharp inhalation of breath to steady her voice. Be. Brave. "She has no pulse. I don't know when it stopped, but I'm bringing her out in case she can be revived. Over."
"What do you...mean?" the boy's head whipped to the Arbiter and tears began to well up.
Be brave, said the voice in her head. The one that wanted everything to be okay. Let go, said the other voice that wanted to be allowed to stop being brave.
"I'm sorry," she repeated, her voice less stable than it had been on the transmission. "I...I didn't come in time. She's dead." A neat word that didn't do justice to the weight of the reality. Memories of Padma. Savannah. All that red, and none of it sin. "I want to get her out of here in case she can still be helped, but..." But she didn't know when the girl had died, and each passing second was a slipping chance. "...but I don't know if we can do anything more."
And the cold, distant part of the bookworm's mind reminded her that it was probably too late. That she should leave the corpse behind. Corpse. Another neat word that didn't embody what was before her. "I'm sorry." Again. She was always sorry, wasn't she? Stepping to an easier position, Siena sank her hand through the rubble, through to the pinned body until she could let the debris fall through it.
Her fault.
The boy stood silently, staring into nothing before quiet, fragile sobs began shaking his shoulders. His hands remained firmly on the sides of his friend's head, as if releasing her would result in the remains of the girl he once knew disappearing with the debris. He didn't let go.
'I'm sorry.' She didn't know how many times she could repeat it as she watched the debris fall through, her concentration firmly planted on her task as each piece tumbled through the body until Siena could slip her arms to lift. 'I'm sorry.' Her voice came out quiet, and though she did her best to keep that brave facade up, the words were weak. Tired. "I'm going to lift her on three. Please, stand with me and...and support her head." Because she could pretend that it would help. "And don't let go until someone else tells you to."
She could have saved the girl.
"One."
If only they had run instead of fought.
"Two."
If only she'd prioritized correctly.
"Three."
She made sure to match the boy's pace, the boy's level, as they rose with the body between them. A few quiet words and instructions to ensure the boy made it through were all that Siena could manage. Another apology. Everything felt distant. She could have saved her. The brunette made sure to watch him exit the building first, the girl past the stone wall with him, and then her own body meeting the outdoors again before she finally released her breath and restored their tangibility.
She could have saved the girl, and Siena knew the boy would probably never forgive her for coming too late. Another body on her conscience. Her. Fault.
There was a rush of concerned civilians that came to meet her, came to help the boy and the victim.
"Theo? What are you even doing here?...No."
As the boy emerged with Siena and the girl, the woman rushed to help them, recognising the child. A motherly embrace swept Theo but ceased as the body in Siena's arms caught her eye. Even just a glimpse of the girl's bloodied face seemed to be too much as a choked but loud wail left her throat. She dropped to her knees, arms clutching her sides as sobs wracked her body. The man in the sweater returned as soon as he heard, trying and failing to console her with a tight embrace. Neither of them addressed Siena, too exhausted and broken to show any gratitude or enmity for what she'd brought back.
More sobs. More broken hearts and broken people. If she had the strength, the willpower to apologize again, she would have, but a hard lump in her throat caught any noise that tried to pass. She could have saved the girl. Could have done more. Mockeries repeated themselves in a rhythmic chant. Her fault. Her fault. Her fault. Again heat stung at her eyes, but the mage stamped it out with emotions so violent that they threatened to shatter the mask she tried to keep in place. Grief would have to come later, and though every fiber of her body wanted to sit down and let the backlash break her, there was work to be done. A sharp, agonizing feeling cut into her with such ferocity that the girl could have sworn she was bleeding, but the instinctive knowledge that even Vale would not be able to numb her for long kept her going. Siena remained silent as she lowered the body, prepared to dash back in to prevent more, but as if the world demanded its pound of flesh, the building seemed to tremble, quake. Her motions paused. No, no, no...
She was going to have to be reckless.
With three tulpas joining in the excavation, the number of rescued evacuees on the surface increased significantly. The man by Emma allocated digging locations for civilians encouraged by the presence of magical help, though they kept a wide berth from both the summons and their commander. But even with the public display, others weren't so keen on the increased presences of USARILN personnel and subnaturals.
"The Pandora bitch thinks that tossing around a few rocks will erase everything?" a taller male scoffed nearby.
The man in the sweater glared back. "I don't see you helping, asshole."
"I'm just letting the subs pull their weight. Isn't that why they're here, to play hero?" the newcomer let out a hollow laugh.
Emma's helper didn't retort, busying himself by helping another buried citizen out of the mound. His desire to defend the X-mark only went so far.
Pandora. Emma hadnโt heard the name yet, but she supposed it was fitting. Emma didnโt respond to the man, not at first. First she kept pulling at the rubble, searching for the others, and it was only after a moment more of consideration that she spoke, face unchanging, โYou should evacuate. Itโs probably not safe in D.C. for the time being,โ she finally glanced up at the man in the sweater and the older women, โYou guys too.โ it took not even a moment for her gaze to drop again, tired eyes focused on the task at hand.
"Not yet," the man wiped at his forehead, looking more determined as he dived back into his work.
"Oh, it's not safe?" the other one spat, "And whose fault is that?"
Emma paused to give the sweatered man a wary glance before nodding and continuing. As for the other man she gave no response; there was nothing she could say to placate the man, nothing to change the way that he felt or the way she felt.
"Hey, answer me, sub," the rude one began clambering up, something the woman didn't take too kindly to.
"If you're just gonna bitch then you should leave," she called out irritably but made no other move towards him.
"What? Are you gonna defend her too?" the angered man now stood by Emma, towering over her crouched form. He addressed her directly, "Do you expect us to believe that this was all some sick coincidence? Some subnatural brats start living the high life in our city, then the next thing you know, D.C., gets completely destroyed. You gonna say anything about that, bitch?"
โTake it up with Director Lina Zhang. Or Commander Kardos, if you please. Or anyone at USARILN East thatโll take your calls. We didnโt choose to come here. We wouldnโt have come here if we had any choice in the matter.โ Emma kept digging, not seeming to pay the man any mind but ready to move if he moved. โThatโs not what you want to hear, I know, but itโs the truth.โ
It was definitely not the answer he wanted. It didn't seem like anything could placate him.
"Talk with those government assholes. That's all?" he narrowed his eyes, voice breaking ever so slightly.
He swiftly grabbed her by the shirt, forcing her gaze to meet his.
"This was my fucking home, you skank. My brother's building got swiped by an ice monster and everything I've ever known is fucking levelled. Fighting monsters is all you assholes do and you can't even do that properly!" He gestured furiously in the direction of the giant slime, his outstretched hand shaking, "I don't even know why you're at the evacuation area! Were you seriously just running away from the shit you brought?"
Emma didnโt struggle when he grabbed her. She didnโt call Determination either, who kept at his assigned task. She also didnโt have the right words for him, that much was clear. โIโฆโ
I want to go home.
She gritted her teeth, trying to keep her composure. โIโm sorry.โ no, that wasnโt what she had to say either, but it was all that would come out of her mouth.
"What the fuck? Leave her alone," the sweatered man poked his head back out after hearing the commotion and stomped back to the pair.
" 'Sorry' doesn't bring my family back," the assailant hissed at the girl but was grabbed by the other man before he could say anything else.
A warning from the older woman as she watched her partner's approach. "Tony, don't..."
"Who even cares? She's doing something now, which is more than I can say for you."
The hostile one's grip didn't falter. "Don't butt in, asshole."
"Do as she says and leave."
"Or what? You'll cry some more about the cadavers you keep findi--"
His jeer was cut off by an enraged punch from Tony. The newcomer fell heavily, dragging an unfortunate Emma down with him onto the jagged rubble.
Lily paused from the work she was doing and glanced over to where Emma was. She wasn't exactly surprised that the people she was helping ended up attacking her. They were all so pathetic and she was almost glad that she had a hand in ridding the world of some of them, for a moment forgetting the horror she had caused. A surge of adrenalin ran through her system when she saw Emma being dragged down. "Hey! she called out angrily before she hurried over. Without paying the Regulars around them any attention, she went over to Emma and pulled her up as if she was some stuffed toy she was snatching up.
A dull light emanated from Kusari's head as she watched things unfold around her, if it weren't for her power she would need an aspirin for sure. A regular was needlessly being aggressive towards Emma, Marcus and Siena had gone inside the building, and while some people had come out, they hadn't. In some alternate universe somewhere they were already at the evacuation point, having decided not to stop for these people. Ahhh, just kill me already. She walked over to the man that had grabbed Emma and squatted down beside him. She placed her right hand over his mouth, effectively silencing him and preventing him from moving.
"Listen you pasty fuck." She said, her eyes glaring at him with a disturbing calm. "We didn't kill your family, we didn't cause this. You have no reason to be such an asshole and you know it." She tightened her grip on his face, her eyes widening ever so slightly. "But if you touch any of my friends again, I will give you all the reasons you could ever ask for." She released the man and stood to her feet. "Understood?"
Emmaโs face hit the ground hard, jagged rocks adding to the growing collection of bruises on her face. Emma rubbed her ruined face as she was lifted off the ground. Truth be told she didnโt want the help of Lily or Tony, but it was too late now. โThanksโฆโ Emma said, directed towards her pair of saviors. It was only now that Emma saw Kusari squatting over the man, threatening him โItโs okay, Kusari, let him go.โ was all Emma said to the girl before looking down at the man. โSorry about your family. Iโll take the blame, but save it for after weโre done here. There are still people trapped.โ Emma gave a slight smile, probably not the right choice, but it was instinctive. In fact, none of what she said was the โrightโ choice, but all the same she turned back to start searching again.
The angry man's brow furrowed at the subnaturals' words, particularly Kusari's threat, but he didn't respond immediately. A tentative hand nursed his blackened eye while the other pushed him to his feet.
"Bunch of pricks..." he muttered and finally retreated.
Tony watched on with arms crossed, looking as if he wanted to say something before a devastated wail caught his ear.
"I...uh..." he began but decided against it in the end, choosing to rush to the older woman's side instead.
Kusari watched the man she'd just threatened leave, letting out an annoyed sigh and turning to Emma once he was out of earshot. "You don't need to humor people like him, Emma." She clanged the claws on her right hand together in irritation, another bad developing habit. "You give them an inch and they'll take a mile."
Emmaโs face was still the same. Unsettlingly normal. โItโs fine.โ she said flatly, making no move to follow Tony. She already knew what they found. โIโm not humoring him, Iโm humoring myself.โ Emma turned back towards the rubble, continuing her previous task.
Kusari opened her mouth to say something, but she didn't know what to say. That look on Emma's face said enough already. Everyone had coping methods, some better than others. She of all people couldn't judge her for it, but she didn't want to see everyone slowly break before her eyes. And she was sure the others would break, it was only a matter of when. Most of them weren't even adults, for them to be constantly forced to deal with pain, death, and suffering was too much to ask.
She walked back to the front of the truck, simply watching over the scene. The least she could do was protect them.
As soon as Emma was up, Lily silently moved away and just as silently watched Kusari intervene. She didn't really wanna intervene. She had intervened too much earlier already and she was glad that none of the people really paid her any attention-probably thanks to her being so small. When Emma turned back to her previous task and Kusari walked away, the blonde teenager wandered off figuring that she wasn't of any help with the rubble anyway.
She walked right smack into a group of people with a woman in the center, cradling a small child who was sobbing because of multiple cuts on her arm. Lily immediately knew that the child's injuries were superficial despite the tears running continuously down her face. When one of the men saw Lily--particularly the x mark on the base of her neck--he gestured to the other and they converged on the woman and the child as though the Aberration would harm them. But the dejected teenager merely passed by them and continued walking away.
A few steps away, she paused and considered a thought that popped into her head. It was a tiny gesture but perhaps it would count as atonement for the crimes she committed earlier. Her black thread reappeared on her arm and headed towards the child in her mother's arms. When the ominous looking thread wrapped around the child's wrist, the men that were shielding her and the woman cried out in anger. One made a move to go after Lily.
"Wait," came the woman's voice just as the small cuts transferred from her child to Lily. She watched the black thread dissipate as soon as the transfer was complete. "She... that girl... she took Abby's cuts...Look!" she exclaimed.
Multiple civilians responded to the woman's exclamation, marvelling at the fortuitous reveal of Lily's power. An alarmingly large crowd began moving to her with their own injuries or wounded associates, hoping that the subnatural would heal them too.
Sitting on a mound of debris, Angรฉlique glanced all around her at the scene of desolation. She felt uneasy being out there, the Regularsโ gaze and the guardsโ eyes watching her as if she was a rabid monster ready to attack. She felt so vulnerable sitting here. Eventually, her eyes would settle over the raging battle taking place just about close to where Unit B previously took residence temporarily. The battle was raging over there, buildings being tossed at the slime, only to be crushed as an eerie force was at work over there. Her thoughts then drifted to her remaining classmates. How were they doing? Were they still alive? What the hell was happening over there?
For a brief moment, Allison came into her mind. They havenโt spoken to each other ever since that night the brunette revealed her feelings to the fallen rockstar. Recalling her earlier transmission about following through a plan that might kill them, Angelโs mind suddenly grew restless. Again, Angel felt conflicted about her feelings towards the girl, but she was certain of one thing: she wished to see her back and alive after this ordeal. Angรฉlique considered the idea of calling Brent to inform her of the situation, but if the building flinger and whatever was crushing those pieces were looking for their group, Angel didnโt want risking their position by making an untimely call, like how Ernie contributed to the hate towards the evacuation effort by telling everyone to not bother with the civilians.
Thinking about Evac Team and its members, Angel spotted Sophia moving around. The girl had been badly injured during their fall, Angel probably to be blamed partly for crushing her into her arms when she attempted to shield her. She was too young to witness such things already. But she was a Subnatural. The moment her white-mark appeared, she was fated to suffer from injustice and cruelty. Thinking about the young brunette Arbiter, Angรฉlique wondered what her power was. She was probably the only classmate she actually had no idea of their power. She had been assigned to be part of Evac Team before. Surely she had a power useful for such?
โSophia.โ The black-haired Aberration called out softly to the girl using her magic to project her voice next to the Arbiter, gesturing Sophia to join her.
This time Sophia jumped a bit at Angรฉlique's voice, but she wasted no time thinking about the Aberration's power, glancing around until she spotted the girl gesturing to her. At least going over there would give her something to do. Getting down from the truck once more, she kept a hand on the side of the truck as she moved towards Angรฉlique. Ignoring the lightheaded feeling that made her instincts tell her to lie down instead of move around, once she could no longer use the truck to steady herself she took those steps unsupported till she reached the rubble. The mound earned itself a cautious look, before she sat down hurriedly. Near to Angรฉlique, but still with at least a good two to three feet between them. "Uh, yeah?"
Seeing Sophia walking with such difficulty, Angel questionned herself about calling the young girl to her, instead of moving herself to meet her. The Arbiter youth really did look even worse than the older Aberration.
"I'm sorry to have you come up all the way here. How are you holding up?"
Obviously she wasn't well, Angรฉlique figured, but she wanted to know how she was mentally. Hopefully she wasn't too shaken up by what happened back there.
For a few seconds, all Angรฉlique got from Sophia was a blank stare. How... was she holding up? Perfect time to have a nice and friendly chat. Just sit on a pile of rubble and chat about feelings. "Oh... I'm fine." Her hands tensed, not entirely so they made a fist, but enough so that she was making claws with her fingers. She meant to stop there, but found herself continuing, louder than her usual whispery words.
"Of course I'm fine. Why wouldn't I be? I mean, we're only sitting here, in the middle of an attack, to have a nice conversation. That's wonderful." She swept an arm around gesturing at their surroundings. "Only... I don't know, only a few people have died, right? And I can't do anything, you're not doing anything, and I can't..." She trailed off, turning away from Angรฉlique as she tugged at the ends of her hair.
Angel was taken aback by the sudden burst of sarcasm that came out from the little one's mouth. She really didn't expect the quiet child to have this kind of attitude firsthand; or rather she really never knew anything about her to expect anything of Sophia's personality.
The sound Mage's brows creased into a more pronounced frown. Calling Sophia out here really wasn't the best idea, had she known the kid to be this way. Her reasons were justified though. Everyone probably had a bone to pick against the raven-haired singer after what she did.
"Look, I'm sorry things didn't turn out to be as perfect as we wished they would be. Shit happens, I fucked up, we made bad decisions. But those things will keep happening, because that's going to be what the remaining of our lives will be, as combat slaves. I wouldn't be moping around here doing nothing if it wasn't for the fact that we fell down a fucking twenty story-high tower and a bookcase that crushed my insides. I don't have the physical power right now to help, and my powers can't help here either, because we now know just how fucking useful it was back there."
Angel's words were harsh, but that was a reality that had started to rapidly sink into the young woman's head. She had no mind right now to carefully pick her words, on top of generally being bad with kids. She was too tired of all this shit and just wanted it to end as quickly as possible.
In the end, Angรฉlique sighed, unable to bear herself being this antagonizing on someone who needed to be reassured rather than berated. "Listen, I know you are in a worse shape than I am, I can't blame you for being unable to help. You were part of the evacuation team, back in Wisford, so I assume you have some powers that would help with that, right? Are you limited by your injuries, or is it something else?"
Angel had no idea how to approach that situation. She wanted to know what Sophia could do, see if there was anything to make out of her. Her stinging words about not doing anything had the fallen idol more frustrated about standing around here being useless while most to the others were actively helping. At most, it was Angel's own ego to prove her younger classmate that she wasn't so fine sitting uselessly like that, even if it was partly because she didn't want to have anything with Regulars right now.
Sophia hadn't exactly been meaning to blame Angรฉlique for not doing anything, more upset at how the Aberration wanted to "chat" like nothing dire was going on around them. Perhaps after another minute or two Sophia would have calmed down the panic that she was now beginning to feel as she did nothing, but Angรฉlique's words didn't help. She's sorry that things didn't turn out to be perfect? Shit happens?
Hello? She wasn't stupid, she didn't have ideals where everyone got along with each other fine and dandy, where no one would ever die. She didn't need Angรฉlique telling her that her life was not going to be some happy story on TV like she was some child. "Oh wow, really? I thought that any moment now a helicopter would come and take me back home. Some knight in shining armor should be here in a minute. You mean my life is actually going to be made up of bad stuff?" But even as spoke, Sophia could feel her eyes beginning to sting. She knew that, she knew that, she knew that. She knew that her life would never be as it once had been again, that "shit" was going to happen. She didn't need a reminder.
"My powers that help with evacuation?" She was silent for a few seconds thinking about how useless her power was here, how it wasn't strong enough. "It's not any use." Not with her. Last time she had seen... what? Seen two children, but they probably would have been spotted anyway. She hadn't been able to give any helpful information about that dog. "I see through stuff, okay? That's all. But I can't see enough, so it's useless." A pause as she clenched and unclenched her jaw. "Not being able to do anything doesn't mean that you should sit around and try to chat. Or lecture people."
Another bout of sarcasm, another frown. This discussion was going south rapidly, and the last statement really irked Angel more than it should have. The Aberration jerked up swiftly, almost loosing footing and dropping to one knee, but managed to steady herself by leaning on the large chunk of debris.
"I'd rather be talking and knowing more about my classmates than brooding and being sassy about all of this." Angรฉlique sharply replied to the young Arbiter, growing the more tired about her sarcastic remarks. But now that she knew about her powers, there was some sort of renewed vigor to keep pressing forward.
A Sight Mage and a Voice Mage. Two seemingly powerless entities, yet a combination that could prove very useful in this situation, if someone was ever willing to pair these two powers and have them work together. Someone with good resource management.
"So what, you have partial X-ray vision? How is that not useful here? Did you try seeing through the rubble? Even if you would see the faintest sign of life, or anything that would help locating someone, that's more than enough, for me at least."
Sophia ignored what was said about brooding or being sassy. She wasn't brooding. She might be using some sarcasm, but that wasn't out of place. Getting to know each other, yeah. This was a perfect way for the two of them to get to know each other. She opened her mouth to say so, but bit back the retort as Angรฉlique continued to talk.
...what was the point of trying to see through rubble if you already knew that you couldn't see enough? She couldn't see the living anyway. Fitting, for someone who avoids humans at all cost. I've always avoided people, so now... I guess that's fitting.
But I can see clothes. Still, it wasn't any use if she couldn't even see far enough to catch sight of any clothes. She hadn't tried, no, but why should she just because that Aberration scolded her about it?
But some part of her, perhaps triggered by what Angรฉlique had said, thought that she should try. She hadn't wanted to because she knew she wasn't strong enough, but perhaps that would appease her. Make Angรฉlique leave her alone. "Fine."
"But it's not going to work." She switched on her power, and looked around.
Finally, Angel managed to coax her into using her power. She wasn't pleased by the Arbiter's apparent defeated attitude about her powers, but the raven-haired Aberration wanted to see what she was capable of. Sophia's lack of belief in her own abilities made Angelique wonder if the girl wasn't just too quick to give up or if her powers really weren't that useful. But to hear about it, and giving the circumstances, Angel blamed Sophia's lack of faith.
"It won't if you keep up with this attitude. Stop berating yourself and just make it work." the sonic Aberration commented at first, walking slowly towards Sophia. "If range is the issue, then you just got to move. If details are what you don't see, then focus on something else. If something is beyond your abilities, then use the others to compensate for your fallacies. That's how people with supportive abilities like us work together."
While Angel was still mad at the brunette Arbiter for the discussion they were having, there was still this part of the young woman that was looking out for her classmates. She wanted to help her friends, make them understand themselves better just as she herself tried to understand her powers. If she could manage to work together with Sophia in finding survivors, then that would be the best thing to have happened today. Deep within, she hoped Sophia would put as much effort into this as Angel was trying to cooperate despite their dispute.
"If there's anything I can do to make you see better or make this easier for you, please say so." Angel offered as she stopped just a foot away from her class' youngest Mage.
What Sophia had been expecting hadn't been what she saw now. As the world faded into shades of gray, she had expected to see through maybe one thin layer of rubble to see more rubble lying beneath. Or she had expected to see even less than that. Angรฉlique's words were only partially paid attention to as Sophia turned her head slowly, scanning her surroundings. Oh yes... she was making it work. But instead of the elation that should have come at realizing that she could perhaps be of some use, an expression akin to horror or shock could be seen clearly on her face.
Apart from broken pieces of furniture, around her she could see so many people, their clothes showing Sophia that many were in awkward positions. And some looked flattened... which could only mean one thing.
Crushed. Twisted. Motionless. "Their clothes," she whispered to herself, hands clutching at the rubble she sat on. Once she completed the scan of all the rubble around her, she turned her strange unfocused gaze back to Angรฉlique. Searching for where the Aberration's head should be, she shook her head slowly from side to side. Not thinking about how bad it could seem to admit that she could see plenty after insisting so much that she couldn't, Sophia spoke to Angรฉlique in her usual quiet voice. "There're so many..."
Angel watched Sophia with keen curiosity as she witnessed Sophiaโs eyes becoming unfocused, emanating a soft dim glow blending mostly to daylight. She wondered what it was like, to see through objects. It must be quite the strange experience, she figured. However, Angรฉliqueโs hardened traits slowly softened and revealed a worried expression as the raven-haired Aberration saw the face of her classmate change into one of horror.
They may have been talking sarcastically about death and desolation all around them, but Sophia was probably witnessing now the true face of death, Angel figured. That much was evident as any hint of Sophiaโs previous tone faded into a quieter voice. And it was at that time that Angel realized that she may have pushed the young girl into doing something that was probably far too much for the Arbiter to see.
Meeting her unfocused stare, Angรฉliqueโs hand reached out for Sophiaโs shoulder, forgetting about their argument for a moment as tried to place a comforting hand up on her shoulder. She probably shouldnโt be asking such things of a child, but right now, Sophiaโs ability was the only thing that would allow them to rescue anyone caught in the rubble and quickly save them before itโs too late.
There were Zhangโs words that briefly came back to mind, reminding her that a child meant nothing at USARILN. Then there were Zoeโs on that first night, telling Green Team about growing up and becoming stronger to look for themselves.
Trying to remain resolute, Angรฉliqueโs harsh tone faded to something softer, but still focused on the task at hand. โIโm sorry if Iโm asking this much out of you. But do you know if thereโs anybody alive out there? Could you point them to me? Iโll try to direct the others into unearthing the survivors.โ
Sophia flinched at the touch, but nodded. Anyone... was there anyone alive out there? It made it so much harder that she couldn't see their faces, or if their hands were moving. Still, if they were moving enough she might be able to tell. She started scanning the rubble once more, trying not to let the sight of so many motionless bodies get to her. Nothing, nothing, not- there. Had the leg of a pair of pants moved? Leaning forward slightly, Sophia squinted as a reflex to try and see better, though it didn't help. She was about to give up and keep looking by the time the leg moved again, though the motion was small and weak.
Lucky for the person, the rubble had fallen around them in a way that left a little breathing space around parts of their head and neck, as well as some room around one of the legs, though from what Sophia was seeing it seemed that the person probably was being crushed heavily around the middle... and in a bunch of other places. Like Angรฉlique and I being crushed by the bookcase... except worse.
"I think... I think there's something?" Sophia looked towards Angรฉlique, then gestured vaugely to a point around thirty feet away. "Not too far down," she muttered next, mostly to herself. "I-I'm really not sure though?" She made to get up from where she sat, keeping an eye on the person once more. "...get closer."
Angรฉlique slightly beamed as Sophia indicated the location of a potential survivor. So she was able to make it work indeed. Things seemed to look for the better now that Sophia was actively able to find living people buried underneath. Noting the vague emplacement of the trapped survivor, Angel turned to look at the others, hoping to find someone who could help them.
โGood job. I knew you could dโโ
But just as though she thought everything was starting to go well for their evacuation effort, Angel witnessed things that she feared earlier. A Regular was assaulting Emma, again. Just what was the deal with her? She clearly had the power to fight back and protect herself. Why isnโt she doing so? Why is it always her being targeted? Was her interview really beckoning Regulars to inflict pain on a now-popular X-Mark? Angel had half a mind to jump in there and scream the guy off her Aberration classmate, but her attention was soon redirected to a portion of the building collapsing on itself as a group of civilians managed to escape in-extremis.
With her mind now scattered everywhere at once, the raven-haired Mage was trying to figure out what to do now. The attack on Emma, the survivor she just found with Sophia, the collapsed part of the condo, and Marcus and Siena nowhere to be found. With a clarity of mind that Angรฉlique havenโt had for a while ever since her Stigma was no longer addling her thoughts, Angel focused intensely on the priorities to be set, and that would require everyoneโs effort.
โKusari, Grantโฆโ Angel called out with a magical whisper to the two Arbitersโ ear only, โโฆmake sure no one gets attacked again. If this persists, weโre leaving.โ The magical vocalist breathed, refocusing on her query, โGrant, thereโs a buried-alive survivor Sophia managed to find. Pay attention for a shout coming a few dozen feet away from my location.โ
A moment later, after Angรฉlique aligned her thoughts with the position Sophia believed the trapped person was, a distressed shout could be heard from the rubble โHelp! Iโm trapped! Please help me!โ
Hopefully that would draw the attention of anyone helping unburying survivors to care for that person. Then for her remaining queries, Angรฉliqueโs focus intensified to reach out to her last two remaining classmates.
โSienaโฆโ a voice came to the brunette Arbiter.
โโฆMarcusโฆโ the same voice manifested itself to the other Arbiter.
โโฆwhere are you guys? Are you alright?โ Angel's voice reached out to both of them.
All the while Angรฉlique was speaking, her lips moved but no voice ever came out from her speaking mouth. As she just finished with Marcus and Siena, fatigue hit the sound Mage hard, her dizziness coming back full-force and sending her stumbling backwards onto the large chunk of debris as her mind faded to black for only a second and her legs flinched. She had never felt this mentally-depleted before. Was it because she was overexcerting herself by using magic? It was strange, for her powers usually fatigued her vocal chords way before she felt this tired. Maybe it was because of the focus she had to put into the newest aspect of her power?
Nevertheless, the situation seemed to go downhill quickly, to Angรฉlique's perspective. All she hoped was for her classmates to remain safe, and hoped her words would reach her friends.
The entire time, Grant had been on standby since the act of keeping the plow up and running apparently took a tow on him. While everyone else was doing what they could to help, he has been resting up. It wasn't until he heard Angel's disembodied voice beside him when his attention snapped to his surroundings to listen in on what she was saying. Looking around, he spotted her, giving a nod. Not long after he resigned himself once more to his recharge, another message came. He looked ahead, focusing on trying to hear the shout that Angel mentioned.
When he heard the panicked voice, his head raised and he set out toward its direction, getting his chains ready. He was still slightly fatigued, but it couldn't take up that much energy, could it? Connecting his chains to the debris, he began to crumble it down to nothing.
โTheyโre taking too long,โ Director Zhang muttered to herself, eyes narrowing at the stalled dots on her phoneโs display. And with every passing minute that she couldnโt get a handle on the situation was the lowering probability that she would be able to fix it, period. There was no time to wait on them.
She cast her gaze around the chaos ringing her where soldiers barked orders and confirmations over their phones and civilians huddled and cried for help, demanding special attention to their loved ones. It was an exodus not unlike the aftermath of Chinaโs devastation, where survivors on the fringe of the destruction had flooded the western European borders searching desperately for refuge and rescue. Lina Zhang had been younger and kinder then, unmarked by the scars of simply living in the hostile new age. An ambassadorโs intern at the time in a chancery bordering the Tibetan Highlands of southwestern China, Lina had been solely focused on the task of funneling Western aid towards future development of the region. It was a small role in a nondescript location, but she had harbored plans of taking control once the locale had settled. She had not beenโand would not have ever beenโready for the razing that shook the land and grayed out the sky with smoke and ashes. Evacuation was impossible. Flights had either flown or could no longer fly in the darkness. Pandemonium stretched even as far as the fringes of the barren highlands and what had been paperwork, numbers, and endless contracts became a daily struggle to provide the basic necessities for desperate refugees who had gone as far as their legs or gas tanks would allow. Anything to escape what they thought was the worldโs end.
The memory aligned perfectly with the scene in front of her eyes, but the Director watched impassively now, concerned only with her goal and little else. People watched her warily, but remained quiet, unwilling to face the ring of soldiers around her to ask for help.
At least for the first few minutes of her presence there.
A man approached tentatively, hope on his sun-tanned face as he addressed the renowned director.
โM-my wife was shopping for groceries and I couldnโtโโ
โNot now,โ the Director responded, not bothering to even listen. On cue, a soldier raised a hand at the man, in a gesture to step back.
โBut you have to help!โ The ravenous need to be allotted special consideration lined the manโs words until they thickened with emotion and instead of stepping back he stepped forward. โSheโs pregnant! You canโt just leave herโโ
Before even the soldiers could point their guns at him, the Director already had.
โNot now,โ she repeated, voice gentler. Her finger curved onto the trigger of the Hephaestus weapon.
She watched his pockmarked face break and could almost hear the hopes crashing around him. He stepped back, fighting the tremors of stress and panic across his body and the newly arrived tears welling up in his eyes.
A separate set of soldiers nudged him back towards his group of evacuees, checking over every person for any injuries that werenโt immediately apparent. In the back and separated from the groups of recovering citizens was the unconscious healer, already hooked up to several transfusion bags while paramedics injected his converted blood into the worst of the injured citizens, marveling briefly at every blossom of white, glassy mist that sheathed an affected targetโs torso. More trucks commandeered from nearby towns were already on the way to help evacuate citizens, but the wait allowed most of them the time to recover with the magic they scorned so much.
โSend a squad towards their location. Bring them here,โ she nodded at one of the soldiers making up her protective ring. He saluted and relayed the order through his phone, selecting a group already close to the subnatural teamโs location.
โWhat about the civilians, maโam?โ he said, turning towards the Director again.
โPick up convenient ones. Leave the rest.โ
โโฆYes, maโam.โ
The fury of a dragon, even an injured one, was nothing to trifle with and despite retreating quickly into itself to thicken its density, the slime closest to Chrisโs fiery explosion and burning fuel still boiled and bubbled as the dragon raked claws through the material. Unwilling to let the damage spread further, the main body sectioned itself off, withdrawing veins and arteries and leaving behind a semicircular lump of clear ooze. The amount was still nearly five times the size of the attacking dragon, but it cleared the damage away. Nearby, tendrils and growth began devouring the nearby buildings, slowly replenishing the lost and damaged material.
All in vain, and the woman the slime once was realized this too late. Common parlance dubbed the experience โlife flashing before oneโs eyes,โ but to her it was nothing short of hellfire racing across the lines of her nerves.
Gregoryโs projectile made contact. Allisonโs blade connected. Brentโs gun was fasterโso much fasterโthan the crusherโs reactions.
The bolt of light vaporized the crusherโs head, searing through slime and concrete with equal ease. The weapon dissolved away in Brent's hands, scorching his skin but not long enough to cause permanent damage. Meanwhile, Sanderโs wild, unstoppable motions were jolted forward by the sudden surge of free, open air over his upper body as the area of slime surrounding him and the headless crusher retreated, the injury from the heavy damage triggering a reflexive recoil. Human, after all.
Cauterized veins and arteries that had been unable to withdraw in time spasmed where healthy tissue met damaged sectors and the slime began digesting the body of its dead ally, desperately attempting to replenish its form.
All in vain. All in vain.
Allisonโs blade made the barest of contact with the slimeโs surface, but it was enough. The mass shuddered, the trembling vibration coursing through the ground and into the surrounding buildings. Large segments of its body sloughed off even as Zoeโs rot spread like wildfire along the lines of its organic nervous system leaving behind nothing but putrefying liquid that spread into dollops of black inside the dense liquid. The heart and brain slid quickly away from the encroaching damage, moving well out of range as the slime closest to Zoe lost its steady control and began sliding down.
At the edges of the necrotizing Aberrationโs power, the rot stopped, but the damage had been done. The Animus spasmed again, trying to gather back the scattered remnants of its slime flesh, each piece an amorphous, unresponsive blob of clear muck the size of large tractors. The process was slow, Allisonโs power severance having reset the process of its growth back to the initial levels and preventing it from controlling the bulk of its body, though the girlโs ability fought a losing battle against the sheer might of what she was truly cutting.
But without the crusher to help ward off Kadabraโs attacks, the decaying, weakened slime had no method of stopping the Precursor.
So Kadabra tried again, wrestling mentally with the recovering Animus for control of its inorganic body. Still in contact with Allisonโs blade, the creature lost the fight this time just as the young woman collapsed unconscious, her power flickering away as her body gave in to the strain of what she had just attempted to cutโand not even cleanly. Regardless, she had done her job.
It ended as quickly as it began.
The moment Kadabra felt his magic encompass the creature, he pushed the mass inward, crushing towards an arbitrary center and ignoring the organsโ attempts to rocket around the body. It didnโt matter where they went. All paths led to death. Slime surged again, rippling under the weight of the Precursorโs will, but Allisonโs attack had reduced its control to almost nothing and the pain of Zoeโs rot had already scattered its focus to the winds.
The sound was muffled under the slime, like a footstep into thick mud. A bloody paste remained where the heart and brain had been. The body collapsed, tearing down several buildings as the liquid surged outward, engulfing Sander once again and pushing him with its motion, but this time without mind and purpose.
Not ungrateful for the subnaturals that had helped, Kadabra lifted their building away from the flood of muck, bringing it closer to his lofted perch as he scanned the area for any more potential disasters lurking. Their immediate location had been cleared of bystanders. The bodies that remained were only good for funerals.
He shifted the building, dipping it lower until the studentsโ floor was on the same elevation as his floating platform, still broadly displaying the red lettering of some restaurantโs โGrand Opening!โ Dust and debris caked the Precursorโs clothes and in the afternoon light he looked as weary as the students, eyes strained and face drawn from the repeated stress of battle after battle. He watched them in silence for a moment, scattered across the floor of the room from the sudden lift of the building. One was out cold, but that would have to be dealt with later. He was no doctor.
โโฆGood work. I understand you have never fought Dreamcatcherโs real monsters before, so congratulations. This is what victory looks like.โ
The words were clean, washed of emotion as Kadabra turned and looked upon the broken fragments of buildings and people coated in a sheen of now-dead slime. Livelihoods and lives. After the appearance of the ice maiden and Firestarterโs light that had annihilated the frost monster, the skies had slowly cleared and now unfitting sunlight clarified the fine details of slaughter and senseless destruction.
It was different from seeing a desolate wasteland or a small village obliterated. This was a city where bright lights and loud, angry cars had rumbled and honked their ways through the streets crawling with people of all shapes and sizes. It was safety disrupted. An oasis set aflame. Crumbling buildings and geysers of water bursting from broken fire hydrants dotted the ruined cityscape and Kadabra realized only as he began that he was heaving a long, heavy sigh.
โIโll move you to the evacuation point,โ he addressed the students inside the building, making sure to keep the broken edifice level so they could stand easily. A phone slid out from the front pocket of his brown sweatshirt, positioning itself next to his ear and dialing on its own. When he reached the other end, the message was short and sweet: โTargets eliminated. Retrieving USARILN East students. Send coordinates for any more in the area.โ
A moment of silence passed in pale imitation of a mournerโs respect and the phone shifted to hover in front of the Precursorโs face. He briefly glanced at the naked, pseudo-vampire and the dragon far below them, but the information the Director had provided gave him a reason to not worry about one of the two. That one, at least, would be fine on his ownโ-would likely be faster on his own as well, assuming nothing else cropped up. He picked up the bleeding, burning dragon on a large section of concrete instead, shearing away a spacious chunk right below Chris's clawed feet and lifting the injured Arbiter with them.
Without another word Kadabra moved the platforms and the floating building, the motion slow and steady now that there was time to breathe after the storm had passed. Below them, the passing lines of asphalt and intersections broke at random where collapsed buildings, dented cars, and broken people had become morbid decor in the devastation.
Allison is unconscious but I'll allow that it was brief if Vari wants to wake her up this round. Just make sure she's exhausted and all that--felt like a heavy weight was crushing her during the contact with the slime. Sander's phat ass is there for everyone to witness. Crusher is headless. Bits and chunks of slime everywhere. Generally ruined city.
Unless someone really goes nuts, this will likely be the last of this round's combat post and we'll transition to recovery next round and potentially another interaction period. I'll have to see what happens. For the evac area where you guys are helping citizens, banjo will handle that personally. Personally.
She'd heard the buzzing. Many times, in fact, since she had gotten up from the floor of the collapsed penthouse. Up until now she'd been tuning it out- there were bigger fish to fry, but now there was a moment of relative calm and Emma let herself focus on her vibrating pocket. Emma already knew who it was- the only person it could be, the only person that she wanted to keep in touch with that also cared enough to keep in touch with her. A bitter thought- not the contact she wanted, but the only one she could get.
Emma reluctantly stopped digging. The tulpas were probably doing a much better job of it anyways. She reached into her back pocket, hands closing around her phone, pulling it out in front of her... the screen was shattered, but the phone still worked. A small stroke of luck on a distinctly unlucky day, a day that she just wanted to end.
If she really wanted it to be over she could just leave, couldn't she?
But no, that wasn't an option. She flicked her phone, unlocking it, eyes going up and down her phone screen.
Em, what the fuck is happening? I saw the news, are you okay?
Em
Em
Em
Emma
Dude, fucking text back
Emma
EMMA
You better not be fucking fighting those things
Where are you
I need to know you've alive, FUCKING RESPOND
She hesitated for a long moment before replying.
I'm fine.
I'll get back to you when I can.
Emma sighed, silencing her phone, returning it to its spot in her pocket. Back to digging it was.
Ernie did nothing but watch. Stare apathetically at the overturned cars. The civilians shuffling past, doing everything in their power to ignore the carnage that had taken place less than an hour ago. The streams of blood moving outwards from their lifeless sources.
So much...
Everywhere...
He shook the memory from his head.
His hands were shaking.
He knew violence. He knew that small actions had devastating effects, that a single gunshot was enough to brand fear into the heart of a city. Violence was supposed to be calculated, never more than needed. Like a misplaced splotch of black destroying a whole palette. Discretion was key when it came to subnatural operations. Restraint was something even the worst X-marks of Reno possessed. Liam would have their heads otherwise. The Senators thrived because there was a little thing the Mahers beat into everyone that joined their ranks. Discipline.
But here? There was nothing. Just a huge, steaming mess of inexperience and unrestrained psychopathy. Bureaucratic asshats turned a blind eye to kids tearing themselves and others apart as long as they got their job done and stayed out of the Regulars' way.
His hands were shaking.
They'd seriously had him fooled. Latching onto people, exaggerating their goodness if they showed the slightest bit of kindness to his rotted self. It was a trap he dived headfirst into once and he hadn't learned since. Fuck, it wasn't even trust. Just expectations, all of them shattered by the sight before him. Stupid, stupid.
Ernie ignored the looters as he approached a particularly dense gathering of bodies. Blood coming from their ears, already drying.
There was no reason for any of this. He couldn't think of any. That was the worst part.
He'd heard Marcus' gunshots. He'd heard Angelique's declaration of imminent death. How many other sadistic acts had he missed over the cuffs? All the people he knew on Evac Team... they were supposed to be good, as flimsy as that belief was. He'd hoped that they were better, that they were ideals he could never achieve. They were meant to be different from him. They were meant to be different from the Senators, though Ernie supposed that that particular wish came true.
Because they were worse. So much worse.
It wasn't a fucking accident! How do you lift a bunch of cars without meaning to, then let them topple onto unsuspecting Regulars? How do you accidentally completely pummel several people's torsos or shout at them until blood leaked from their skulls?
Ernie grimaced as he looked over the body of a burly man, red pouring from a single hole in his temple. No other signs of harm on him. Had Marcus even tried to stop this guy without a gun? Had Emma? Those belts had non-lethal options for a reason. Had any of them even considered them in the heat of battle?
Monsters and fakers, wherever he went. God, this world was fucking diseased. He already knew he was part of the problem. He just never thought that his classmates would be too.
Ernie didn't protest as his clothes dug into his skin and transported him upwards. There was no reason to fight.
Zoe didn't stop the rot as Kadabra lifted the building.
Perhaps in a better state of mind, she would have known that the danger was over, that the movement of the building was from a friend. That Allison had fallen unconscious, and would be unable to flee no matter how much 'encouragement' she offered. That there was nowhere else for them to go as the building floated above the city. As it was, Zoe absorbed none of that, only a sense of white-hot panic as their situation seemed to become even more precarious.
So she kept going, her breathing rapid and panicked. This was necessary, hurting them, if it meant they'd make it out alive. They couldn't fight something this powerful, she couldn't protect them. She'd be the last one alive again. It wasn't right. They had to leave-- Why wouldn't they leave?
"It's not safe here. You have to go, please, I don't want you to die--" Muttering just loudly enough to be heard, desperation to save them from a fight that she didn't realise was over. But there was laughter there too, the sick undercurrent of enjoyment that came with hurting those she cared for. This was the best way, they wouldn't leave if she just told them to, they never did. Efficiency, prioritising. That was the key, it was always the key. "Hurry up."
He had expected more. Though it would have been awful, he had expected so much more than just...
The gun dissolved in his hand, reduced to atomic dust, red, angry marks emerging, an imprint of what the gun once was. Before him, the crusher mage's head had vaporized, leaving a deep hole that a plume of flame jetted out from. The all too unnecessary third overclock.
And once the crusher mage was gone...
If the slime is up and the crusher is dead, we're fine.
Zoe was no longer needed.
Brent's eyes turned from the unconscious Allison to the blighted Gregory. Already, the slime's gelatinous mass was being crushed by a man who tossed mountains like baseballs. No contest now. They were done. All too easy. This was what he needed to do. Sacrifice blood and material wealth for victory. A deep sigh hissed out between his teeth as he clenched his burnt hand, relishing pain, revolted by agony. His left reached for the stun gun, silver circuitry once again overwriting the scientific limitations of the weapon.
"Alright," Brent replied, observing a distance of two meters. "Thanks for holding out as long as you did, Zoe."
At such a distance, he wouldn't miss, even if shooting with his left.
...
When Zoe fell over, Brent turned his smile towards Gregory.
"How's that stigma? Need me to knock you out as well?"
Tunnel vision kept Gregory from feeling the burning that crawled over his skin courtesy of Zoe, and even her words barely registered in his ears. Dangerous up here? They'd just given their position away. If the two didn't die here then, as morbid as it was, he'd rather Zoe send her rot straight through his head than suffocate while being melted alive in the slime.
The sight of success was enough for excitment to blot out the sensation of his skin, though relief once Kadabra joined in broke Gregory's focus. Slapping a hand over his burning back was a horrible idea as the squelch of broken down skin and flesh filled his ears along with an awful stench. To say nothing of the pain from touching an open and spreading wound. Stumbling to keep upright he fumbled around for the pile of firearms even as the entire building rumbled and rose. "You're the one kili-"
Stopping mid-yell as Zoe twitched from the delivered shock, Gregory glanced at Brent with a frown before he shook his head and sighed. "Yapping away as usual, but no." he muttered before gritting his teeth at the Precursor's words. Taking another deep breath as he glanced at the two unconscious Aberrations, his hand reached up to rub at his own X before he caught himself and stopped. Grumbling something underneath his breath, he tried to find some way to stand comfortably with a chunk of his upper body rotted raw.
"Got it," Brent nodded. A first aid kit would have been really helpful right about now, wouldn't it? Another oversight. If Zoe had gone a little too far with her magic, Gregory and Allison would have bled out by the time Kadabra delivered them to the evacuation point. He'd grown too dependent on thinking that healers could get them out of the situation. Hadn't Ernie carried such a kit with him basically everywhere? Had it available and knew how to use it?
Something new to learn then. When things finally quieted down? No, he had to do it as soon as possible. Gun training as well. There was no guarantee, after all, that they would even return to USARILN East now.
Not after the show Evacuation Group pulled off.
Shaking his head, Brent walked off, back towards the elevator shaft. Throughout the entire fight with the slime, the pleas for help from those within the stopped elevator hadn't stopped, a background ambience of terror that was easily overlooked in the heat of the moment. Now though? If Evacuation was so hellbent on completely destroying the public's trust in Unit B, he had to make up for that. Ensure that the Slime Team had some good rep, at least. Carve them out as the exception to the rule.
Arbitrarily approaching the steel doors, Brent placed his hand against the door and applied his power once more. Twice. Thrice. And on the fourth application, the door warped beyond repair, disintegrating beneath his grasp. And what laid behind that door? The regulars within, pressing themselves against the opposite wall, eyes wary and judgmental. They hadn't been a floor higher or a floor lower or stuck inbetween floors. They just had the fortune and misfortune of having the elevator stop as soon as they entered.
All too easy. He had expected more.
"W-wh-" One of the businessmen began, pale-faced at the sight of the armed subnatural.
"Ah," Brent smiled, "Don't worry, sir. All known threats have been dealt with by Unit B and Kadabra. I'm...Proteus, and we're currently being transferred t-"
A bespectacled woman, looking past him, gasped suddenly at the prone bodies of Allison and Zoe, as well as the flesh-rotten form of Gregory.
"-o the evacuation point," the arbiter continued, before stepping aside. "Feel free to make yourself comfortable. We'll be arriving shortly."
"Those people," the man began again, sliding past Brent as if he was trying to stay as far away from him as possible, "are they s-"
"My teammates," Brent cut in, continuing to smile genuinely and pleasantly, "The battle has been hard on them. Now, if you c-"
"Let us down." As if emboldened by the arbiter's relenting tone, an elderly individual spoke up. "I will not stand to be in the same building as the subnaturals that brought ruin to the city! Anyways, isn't that woman over there the lunatic that almost killed a reporter?"
Brent blinked, before shaking his head. "Ah, it's easy to get those two mixed up, but this isn't Zoe. And down below...well, that's a little..."
"What?"
"All known threats have been dealt with, but there's still the possibility of an unknown threat appearing, sir. That's why the Precursors are escorting you back. If my team makes you uncomfortable, feel free to relocate to one of the upper floors. The lower ones have been damaged during the conflict."
The old man narrowed his eyes. "No," he said, with a decisive shake, "If there're unknown threats, shouldn't you lot be down there looking for them? We should be escorted, not you! Take responsib-"
The amethyst-eyed youth sighed, pulled out one of three remaining guns, flicked the safety off, and...maintained his smile.
That shut the senile bastard up fast enough. The businessman who spoke up first had also broke out in cold sweat, while the remaining occupants of the elevator cab were quick to file out, avoiding eye contact as they went up the adjacent stairwell.
"Y-you aren't going to..." Alone now with a subnatural, bravery was in short supply, previous demands dying in his leathered throat.
"We're tasked with saving lives, sir," the arbiter said, "That's why my team's here."
"R-right."
"Would you like me to help you up?"
With the few scraps of composure left in him, he shook his head, walking off as quickly as his knees could afford.
As that trembling back disappeared into the shadows of the stairwell, Brent flicked the safety on once more, a mixture of satisfaction and irritation boiling within him. Ah, that was a bit fun, at least. If Angelic hadn't been so murderous and threatening, perhaps he could have played the loose cannon archetype instead. Got some results from there. For now though, the brunette pulled up a swivel chair, sat down, and leaned back.
The throbbing of his right hand continued to gnaw at the back of his mind. Ambidexterity. He should learn that as well.
A figure in camouflage floated outside the window, ragdoll-like in his flight before he was dispensed onto the subnatural's floor. Ernie blinked, taking only a moment to regain his balance as he reached solid ground. Kadabra's fine control was no joke, huh?
With a sigh, the Aberration surveyed the room's unconscious inhabitants, eyes lingering first on Zoe, then Gregory and Allison's bleeding forms.
"What the fuck?" he grimaced. It sounded less like an exclamation and more like a genuine question as to what the hell had happened here.
"Oh, Ernie!" Brent hopped off from his seat, the wheels squealing as it spun away. "Glad you're around. Wouldn't happen to have a medkit on you, would you?"
"Huh?" Ernie looked up, still looking horrified from what he'd seen. Again? Why the fuck was Brent so casual about this? That sensation of paranoia returned briefly, though he shoved it away in favor of the current situation.
With one last withering glance at the redhead, Ernie nodded and unclipped the kit, starting to unpack it. "How did this even happen?"
"Zoe half-lost her mind and tried to force Allison and Gregory to run away after their job was done by using her power...gently?" The arbiter shrugged, before waving the blonde aberration over. "Anyways, it looks bad, but it's not life-threatening. Knocked her out before she could fully go off the rocker."
He paused, contemplative.
"Think she got better, compared to Wisford. But that might be optimistic."
"She could have fucked off herself, instead of trying to threaten people away," Ernie muttered, gesturing at Gregory to remove his shirt, "The Factory mission isn't a point of comparison any of us should be using. By that logic, a couple of melted thumbs would be better than Wisford. Doesn't change the fact that she's a fucking psycho."
His hands clenched around the roll of bandage. He was starting to run low, thanks to a certain ginger and her motel freakout.
"This class is full of nutjobs. Hazel and Sander... fuck, even Angelique."
The Senators at least took out any dissenters before they could cause more shit. What the fuck was he meant to do here with USARILN, where all the weapons of mass destruction had free reign to fuck up whatever they wanted? Ernie turned to Brent. There was too much in his furious expression, emotion that he didn't know how to release. Fear. Sadness.
Betrayal.
"You heard, right?"
Quirking a brow at Ernie's reaction, Gregory looked at Brent dubiously before nodding towards Allison instead. "No point in bandaging if we're getting Christmas'd or something in a bit. She probably hit her head on the way down though, didn't check."
He didn't disagree with Ernie's points either, but whatever he had to say on the matter would probably just piss the other Aberration off even further. Nutjobs and unhinged they might have been, but far too useful ones to simply get tossed aside. It didn't help that they'd only get worse until they became Animi if he wasn't remembering things wrong from the site either.
Tilting his head, Gregory leaned back against a table carefully and grimaced before asking, "Sounded like a bunch of crap was coming from the cuffs, but couldn't really pay attention to it. Did they run into a mob of panicked civilians or something?"
Ernie fiddled around, searching for his smelling salts. Probably wasn't a good idea to undress an unconscious girl without her permission. The memory was branded into his head and he breathed deeply as he recalled. "From what I saw, 'panicked civilians' probably is the best way to put it. There were... a lot, more than I could even count before Kadabra picked me up. Probably ganged up on the evac team. And all of them were just..."
Inhuman. The blood. The lifeless eyes. Fucking mounds of flesh that merely resembled the living. There was an unreasonable divide between life and death, one that made the boy's breath hitch uncontrollably. He hated seeing them.
"There were just so many, Ernie half-whispered, "Bleeding from their heads, their ears. Must have gotten their eardrums ruptured or some shit. Then there were a bunch that got crushed by fallen cars. That's not something you do to a Reg without aiming to kill. I don't...fuck, I don't know what they were thinking. I've never seen anything like that, anything so..."
Reckless. Vindictive. Excessive. Words he'd see on a vocab test and not on a list he'd use to describe the people he thought were his friends.
"Self-indulgent," he decided, practically spitting the word out.
Exhaling slowly as Ernie explained, Gregory glanced at the building's edge and won- Clicking his tongue as he caught himself, he couldn't bring himself to be too surprised at what had happened. It still sucked to see what sort of effect the aftermath had on the other Ab though, and he frowned as he had to strain his hearing to catch what was being said. Was it fortunate that his imagination was vivid enough to paint a scene for him just from the description he heard? Had they been trying to block off the civilians from getting to them, but dropped the cars when the situation had gotten out of hand?
Cutting his speculation short, Gregory was a bit taken aback by the heat in Ernie's voice, and he forced himself to stand up despite the pain and discomfort. "Don't think that's going a bit far?" He asked as he dropped himself into a chair that hadn't gone skidding out and pushed himself over.
Ernie gave the blond a strange look. He was the one going too far? His classmates had slaughtered dozens for...he didn't even know why. He couldn't even give them the benefit of the doubt and call it an accident.
He said none of it out loud. Instead, he turned back to Allison, sighing a resigned "I don't know. I don't know if I want to care anymore."
Sliding to a stop next to the two with a bit of a spin, Gregory ignored the way his back protested as he leaned against the backrest. "It is a lot easier to not give a damn," he agreed as he raised his left hand and stared at the splotches of decayed skin.
"This outcome was probably bound to happen with such a large group of subnaturals though, considering the fuss that was raised when we moved into town." Kadabra's control was steady enough that Gregory barely even moved as he started to ramble on a bit.
The discussion was interrupted by a pained groan as Zoe shifted, slowly pushing herself up into a sitting position.
The redhead looked disoriented, but fear seemed to override that as she got her bearings. Catching sight of her teammates, it became pure confusion - she barely even registered Ernie's presence. "You're okay?" It didn't make sense. They were still here, hadn't fled, but they were alive. It didn't seem that anything else had happened to them, beyond the patches of decay that littered their skin. Finally, without the haze of her stigma, she realised the danger had stopped long ago.
It had stopped the moment the slime died. Even as the corners of her mouth attempted to lift into a smile at the sight of her teammates, Zoe herself was disgusted. Again. She wasn't supposed to do it again. God, she wanted to vomit.
Damn it, why the fuck did they save me?
Zoe wasn't sure if the others had noticed her sitting up, but she glanced over regardless. For all her earlier conviction, the girl looked sickened at her own actions. Clenching her fist so the glass shards dug into her palm. There was a lot of blood seeping between her fingers, but it wasn't life-threatening. Her stigma wouldn't let her if it was. As the pieces seemed to come together, she spoke slowly. "No-one had to get hurt this time, did they? Not like before." Not like Wisford.
So Angelic had been involved as well.
No, that was a stupid thought. He knew she was involved. She literally screamed her threats over the cuffs, and there was no way in hell he could have mistaken those superpowered screams as something coming from anywhere else. How irredeemably dislikable. After going out of his way to offer her help, after she tried constantly to be a 'good Abe', after he twisted logic enough to temporarily absolve her of the full weight of the Montreal incident, after all that...
Hah. He didn't want to admit that someone he liked, someone he wanted to rise above just decided to walk off the edge all by herself. The way Ernie worded it, Evacuation Team sounded like they had all turned into terrorists. And here he was, more displeased with a friend's regression than the lives that such a mistake caused. Here he was, trying to think about how to turn things around instead of simply...feeling.
Brent forced himself to drop the smile that was about to emerge, eyes flickering to Zoe instead, warily reaching for the stun gun once more. Too little. Next would be two overclocks.
But the red-haired girl seemed calm, or at least disorientated enough to appear so.
"Wasn't bound to happen," Brent said, head tilting towards Gregory, "Someone could have stopped Angelic. There was Marcus there too. Kusari. Sophia. Lawrence. Siena. Grant. Lots of options. Who else..."
Wasn't willing to pull the trigger on a classmate?
"...was involved?"
He blinked.
"And yeah, Zoe. Nothing outside of superficial wounds. Your hand alright?"
"If it was gonna make me bleed out, I wouldn't have been able to do it." Zoe's eyes were becoming clearer now; It seemed she knew where she was, at the very least. She still wasn't quite looking at the others as she reopened her fist and began to pull out the shards with a small smile that, given the whole situation, was ever-so-slightly creepy. "I mean that I didn't have to hurt you guys at all. Danger was over. Pointless."
The last word of the statement didn't just apply to her own actions, but what their classmates had done. It wasn't the body count that bothered her, rather how wasteful their attack must have been. But she should have expected it, shouldn't she? Angel had started listening to her, and maybe that was enough. Zoe chuckled, tossing aside a blood-coated glass fragment. "Whole thing's rotten, huh?"
"Yeah, would be nice if it didn't," Gregory agreed as he glanced between Brent and the now-awoken Zoe, "but mob mentality's a hell of a thing." It was probably a bit too callous to think of dozens dead as a "Play stupid games, win stupid prizes," sort of situation. Well, it was hard to make any real judgements without knowing both sides of the story.
"Situation's pretty much," he remarked offhandedly as he wondered the sort of fallout that was going to follow this whole incident. Would any of the others get thrown under the bus as a cost? Drumming his fingers atop the table, he fell silent as he watched the buildings pass by as Kadabra carried them along.
"Rotten."
That was another good word. And though Ernie stubbornly ignored all the self-awareness Zoe was displaying, he could at least agree with her on that.
" 'Soldiers will be waiting for us there and shoot us on sight'," he mused, talking bitterly and turning to the others, "What do you guys think? Is this class special enough to avoid a firing squad? Even Regulars have been executed for less."
"There are...chambers," Brent said, "underneath the hospital. They keep the more dangerous ones down there. Sedated and such. Probably as a last resort."
He let out a whistle, kicking away a shard of glass. A little cold? A little too pragmatic? A little too cruel, already envisioning a split in those within Unit B, those who proved themselves 'useful' and those who proved themselves 'dangerous'.
"I think we're in the clear," the arbiter said, gesturing to the general vicinity, "But I can imagine the others getting such treatment afterwards. Collared like Hazel, however much that would help, or even tossed into USARILN's dungeon. At least..."
He flinched. Was he so fine with imagining evacuation team being tossed underneath a bus and consigned to true imprisonment just because enough 'important' pieces, Sander, Callan, Chris, and Zoe, weren't involved in that incident?
"...that's better than death."
A prison within a prison, filled with the worst East could offer. Was it bad that Ernie admired Zhang's pragmatism in this moment?
They deserve it.
They did. But he wasn't going to voice it where everyone could hear. He chuckled morbidly instead.
"I guess hanging underground with a corpse-eater would be punishment enough. The smell's terrible."
Ernie knew Hector? Brent's eyebrows lifted momentarily, before cracking a smile of his own.
"Least they won't be rooming with the kid. Dude has no idea how to organize his toybox."
Ernie's turn to be surprised.
"Wait, the corpse-eater is a kid? You've been down there?"
"Wait, how do you know about him if you haven't been down there?"
"Uh, Emma told us before the Factory mission. Reasons to not die or something like that," Ernie racked his brains. There was only one 'kid' he knew of at East. Something about 'clearing bodies' had been mentioned in the chatroom, "Don't tell me that Hector guy is the one."
"Yup, he is. Had some giant Tumor wannabe in the room with him as well. Paid him a visit like, on my second night or so in USARILN with Emma, and I'm pretty sure that made her bonkers."
Emma and Brent hung out? And he also knew that she was a secret ass? Oh, thank god. Ernie's weak smile broke wider. Man, this whole ordeal had made him stupidly desperate for normal conversation. He sat facing the windows, watching the city go by.
"Hey, how come you got the VIP tour? I was dragged off the truck and into a calculus class on my first day!"
Brent scratched the back of his head, recalling those unpleasant and embarrassing details. "Man, it's a super silly story now that I think about it, but it's like...Emma wanted to know where people went when they died, and I had nothing better to do, so I asked around a bunch and we more or less lucked out with meeting this guy called Clark. He knew where to go, lead us there, and BAM, underground cells carrying crazy kids."
"Probs woulda gotten more, if Emma hadn't started laughing maniacally and got us both tazed." Brent shrugged. "Woke up in a cell just in time for Freddie to come and smacktalk us for being curious. And from that day on, I'm pretty sure Emma wants me to slip down a flight of stairs and impale myself on an umbrella."
"Seriously? Dude, she said she'd let me die if it came down to another fight with rogue mages. Like not even in a joking way."
Ernie wondered if this was in violation of their ceasefire, telling this to not only Brent but Zoe and Greg too. But even then he couldn't say he cared too much. He was just glad someone else, Brent especially, saw Emma for who she really was. The others would have found out in their own time anyway, if she was truly as 'bonkers' as Brent was claiming.
"I don't know how to act around her. She might be nice sometimes but...man, that good girl shit reeks."
"Wait, this was after Wisford? Geez, that's pretty fucking nasty, considering all the shit that went down." Brent shook his head, surprised that anyone would have said something like that after what had happened to Savannah. "Really hoping that Marcus doesn't get screwed over by her. Dude deserves hella more than a bipolar weakling."
A loaded pause, as Ernie's thoughts flickered to Cal, then to the scarred Arbiter. Sure, Marcus was a dummy for dating Emma but...
Those trigger-happy bastards deserve each other.
Nah, interfering with relationships was...it wasn't good, right? Marcus and Cal were his friends. And Emma was sort of one too...?
Thoughts for another time. For now, Ernie managed a small laugh. "Heh...yeah, for real."
"Mhmm. Maybe a miracle will happen," Brent said, turning towards the cityscape that had become so distorted. "But I'm not holding my breath."
His hands stuck themselves in the pockets of his dark trousers, churchwear out of place with military hardware.
"Least she's not as irredeemable as Chris."
"Oh really?" Ernie quirked an eyebrow. A full-blown gossip session over the battered remains of a metropolis. This was happening now? Not that he was complaining. He welcomed it. Anything to block out what he'd seen, "He didn't go on a punching spree, did he?"
"Naw, not talking about that," Brent said, waving off that particular incident. He scratched his chin, thinking for a moment about the ramifications of sharing such details, before deciding that, yeah, of course he was going to bitch about it.
"He got me in the buffet room and basically told me to back off from Siena...but the scaly bastard doesn't even have the balls to ask her out in person! Like, nevermind the fact that I only like her, but holyyyy, I swear. Dude almost makes Emma sound like a saint! And hell! Thought he had hots for Angelic the entire time!"
Not asking someone out in person? Ernie was far from an expert on these things but that did seem kinda shady. Easy to lure someone out and scam them that way.
"Isn't there some kind of 'all's fair' rule for this stuff?" Ernie wondered out loud. Never mind the Angelique stuff, he wanted to hear how his friend dealt with a loser like this, "Did you kick his ass at least? The guy's built like a plastic straw."
"Pretty sure I could just bend his back over my knee and snap him, yeah," Brent laughed, "But I wanted to give him a chance, you know? So I told him where Siena was staying and all. Dared him to confess right there. Thought I'd light a fire up his ass and get him to man up...and you know what ends up happening instead?"
Ernie's eyes lit up. "Aw, this is gonna be good."
"I come up a couple minutes later, and the dude's left a letter there instead!"
Brent raised his hands up, gesticulating in exasperation.
"There was a comfy ass sofa he coulda sat his skinny shithole on, but apparently the dude's so busy being a grungy snake that he couldn't even just wait for Siena to come back! Probably creamed himself in relief when he realized that she wasn't there, so he could take the bitch-route and fuck off into a closet instead."
Yeah, this was so much better than thinking about a future where evacuation team got punished for all the crap they pulled.
"Just...gah! Is it weird that I'm making such a big deal of it or something, Ernie?"
It wasn't. Ernie knew this jig they were dancing well. A big, fat distraction. It was working fantastically.
"Nothing weird about looking out for a friend, dude," he shrugged after failing to hold in his laughter at Brent's exasperation, "I don't think a guy that can't even ask someone out properly can handle an actual relationship. It's Siena's problem to deal with at the end of the day.
He snickered, mischievousness rising. "If we're being honest here, I wouldn't've thought the guy who strips naked to use his power would get embarrassed so easily. But the world's a weird place," A grin before something occurred to him. "Sayyyy, how did you even find out about the letter, you sly bastard?"
"Oh, that?" Brent's grin widened, all toothy and a little bit mean-spirited, "Siena and I have like, real fucked up sleeping schedules, so I basically roomed with her. How else do you think I knew her room number?"
The Aberration's eyebrows rocketed up with glee. He gave the Arbiter a playful punch on the shoulder. "Awww shit, you really are sly! So did she end up reading it?"
"I mean, it wasn't even planned...but it certainly was lucky," Brent said, before scoffing at Ernie's later statement. "And of course she didn't read it. No way in hell I gave Chris a chance to man up, only for him to use purple prose to poetically propose his passion."
"He...no way, he didn't write a poem, did he?"
"I'll leave it to your imagination~"
As Zoe finally pulled the last shard from her palm, she listened to the others' conversation with interest. What she heard actually surprised her slightly, though she didn't really care about the pair being discussed. Or more accurately, she had an idea of them, and she didn't think she liked it much. But nonetheless, she was surprised as she finally - properly - noted Ernie's presence along with the conversation topic. It annoyed her, but as their talk seemingly reached a conclusion, part of Zoe knew it would be better to keep her mouth shut.
She very rarely listened to that part.
"Thought you and Emma would've gotten along, Ernie." Words came out before she could stop them, what little filter Zoe had lost somewhere in the mess of blood and pain. "You've got a lot in common. Hiding, running away, letting everyone else do your jobs for you..."
Ernie blinked, turning to the redhead with an eyebrow raised. He didn't recall ever messing with her, or hearing of any news of her disputes with Emma. "And what's that supposed to mean?"
The redhead glared at him, her irritation apparent. What, was he playing dumb now? "Let's start with Wisford, seeing as you're so hung up on that. You didn't actually give a damn about helping anyone - practical concern? Bullshit. You just wanted to run away. Yeah, I hurt Callan, because the others just sat there watching, because lives were on the line and every second mattered. Seconds that you made me waste because you couldn't stand the idea of having no-one to hide behind."
"I didn't hear you with any of the other groups, either. Probably spent this fight doing the same thing. But you know what really pisses me off? Lily." Zoe's tone was level, and that was perhaps more dangerous than her usual ferocity. Struggling to her feet, she glared at Ernie. "Lily didn't know who did that to me. Lily probably lay there wondering if we were being preyed on by god-knows-what, because Emma was too busy trying to run away, and you couldn't even make sure she knew what was going on. And don't tell me there wasn't time, because you sure as hell had time to tell her to change her fucking shirt."
"She...didn't know?" Ernie paled in disbelief at her complete lack of situational awareness. Another talk he needed to have after. As for the rest...
"That...that's not even my fault, okay? I asked Emma to check on her because I was cleaning up the mess caused by your bullshit. Hell, she was the one that brought her in the first place. How was I supposed to know she didn't know? Take that shit up with with her; I'm the one who stuck around to actually try to fix things. And what? You think I was gonna let an Aberration walk around a motel swarmed with USARILN guards in blood-covered clothes?!"
He honestly hadn't even considered that at the time. It was just damn gross.
"She's more unstable than you'd believe. I'm sure the guards have files on that shit so they wouldn't have hesitated to take her out and poke around to see who she fucking maimed. So don't try to shove that on me. And don't you dare say I don't give a damn."
Ernie got to his feet too. Slight mistake. Zoe was a few inches taller and built like a freaking panther. But he kept his resolve. She wasn't completely wrong but she wasn't going to know that.
"I held you back because I'm not stupid enough to let a classmate who'd probably never been a mage fight enter an outnumbered match. And you know what? It's honestly funny because back in that shithole you actually had me convinced that you cared. You were begging to help and then the next thing I know, Cal almost bleeds to death and then this happens!" He gestured wildly at Gregory and Allison.
"I might have retreated but the only wrong decision I made back there was not holding you back longer and knocking your ass out before you hurt any of my friends."
"You think I don't care? Fuck you."
Zoe shook her head. In a way, he was right, but not how he thought. It wasn't that she didn't care to help them, didn't care to stop hurting them-- It was that she didn't know how. Because the only way anything ever got done was with brutality, and to think otherwise was naive. Wrong. It had to be wrong.
"You know what I saw when I got to that battlefield? I saw my classmates floating above a fucking deathtrap and Lawrence, one of the only people who tried to help me, with a hole straight through him. I didn't know if he was alive or dead. The kid was already gone, and the others weren't stopping it." Zoe looked frustrated, and it bled through to her tone. "Yeah, I'd do it differently if I had the chance. But at least I did something, and that's more than I can say for you."
"I'm not gonna spend my life begging for forgiveness, so think what you like. You probably only care so long as you're losing people to hide behind, you cowardly piece of shit." Perhaps that was paranoid, thinking the worst of people so easily. But you judged others by your own standards. "None of this was for my sake, none of it was just because I felt like it. Have I screwed up? Yeah. Am I fucked in the head? No-one knows that better than I do. But whether you believe me or not, I've been trying to protect you guys."
This was pointless. He'd already revealed more than he wanted to about Lily. Made big claims he couldn't take back. It was pointless because everything they were throwing at each other were truths that weren't going to fix either of them. He knew he was a fucking coward and he knew that he'd been hiding since the day Devon shoved a mop into his hands. What the fuck did she want from him?
Ernie grit his teeth as she ranted. This bitch clearly didn't know how to face anything in a way that didn't involve rushing in headfirst. So fucking stupid. All her cards were on display and she didn't even care. He'd seen that desperation, that determination at Wisford. He was seeing it now. So when Zoe declared that she'd been protecting them, Ernie scoffed. Because what was the fucking point?
Despite everything, he knew what a Stigma could do to someone. He just knew that despite her actions and unlike him, Zoe was a shitty liar. So he believed her. And he hated that. Because what would his opinion change?
"Then start acting like it," he said curtly, the heat having left his words, "Keep that shit directed at the monsters and Ground Zero folks. Maybe someone else would believe you then."
"I'm not sure it'd be a good thing if they did." Because then they'd start to trust her. They might start to care. They'd be vulnerable, exposed, and all it would take was one slip. Bursting veins. A torn out throat. The shuddering, whimpering body of someone that thought they loved her, bundled in a too-large coat. "Truth is..."
I'm scared. I don't want to be like this.
I'm strong. I did what had to be done.
Cowardice. Conviction. Neither were voiced. Instead, she sighed, speaking as though it were the easiest thing in the world to understand. "Someone has to play the villain, and people like me don't get happy endings. Thought I could keep the others from ending up the same." Hurt crept into her voice, remembering what their teammates had done. A bitter laugh. "Fat lot of good that did."
He looked at her impatiently. This was something too familiar, someone he knew driving themself into a corner. Stupid.
"Obviously your villain act isn't up to scratch," he remarked, "No one here was willing to shoot you through the torso so that's a no-go."
She did care. To the point of losing herself, which was more than Ernie could ever say for himself.
"Look. There are people here who...give a shit," He didn't include himself in that group but that wasn't important here. "They don't want you getting hurt, especially if you're doing it to yourself. That's why we're all in this building here, right? We're gonna learn from this. We're gonna talk instead of running around in circles next time and if it's distance you actually need then you'll get it."
Internally, he laughed at himself. What hypocritical shit was he going on about now?
"In my experience, trying to decide who deserves a happy ending only ends up making everyone want it more. There's no need to think about it so hard. You care too much to play the villain anyway. No way you're winning any Oscars with that."
It was a shame he couldn't say the same for the evacuation team. They really had him fooled.
"That probably makes me more dangerous, not less. If I didn't care, I'd probably be a lot better at looking after you guys. Passion's unpredictable." Her ruthlessness wasn't born from detachment, but protectiveness. And that meant that she wouldn't let go of them. That she'd happily paint a city in blood if it meant they'd survive another day. "Sometimes caring means you do what you have to do. Carrying the burdens. Pulling the trigger."
No, caring didn't stop her from being a monster. "The road to hell, isn't it? If I didn't give a damn, it'd be a lot easier." Zoe sighed. Fact was, she wasn't worth shit. Only violence, only destruction. And if she couldn't destroy herself to keep them safe, she was more than happy to let the world destroy her in their place. Her gaze flitted to Gregory, and then Allison. "I'm not really someone you want caring for you."
"You don't always have to be the one to make that decision," Ernie replied, "But I guess you're right. Sounds like a lot less work when you've run out of shits to give. Unfortunately for yourself, you don't seem like the type to take the easy road at all."
He looked away. This was too familiar.
"Looking after people without caring, huh? Not many people can manage that."
He was probably right. And she knew she couldn't stop herself from caring far too much. For a brief second, Zoe looked as though she wanted to say more, but eventually settled on silence.
"Are you all done?" A cold, tired voice eminated up from the crumpled form of Allison Revel. She felt as if she had just been hit by a truck, all the energy drained from her body leaving her in an exhausted pile on the ground. She had been lying there for what felt like forever, not exactly sure when she rose back into consciousness, though it had seemed that no one had noticed when she did, as their gossiping and arguing must have been very important. "Can someone please help me up?" It took her a moment to get out the words between laboured breaths.
"Yeah," Brent offered a hand, glancing over at the silent Ernie and Zoe duo, "You feeling alright now? Or still dead on the inside?"
"I'm fine," Allison said before grabbing Brent's hand and lifting herself off the floor, wincing at the sharp pain that flew over her back as she did. She shrugged off his comment and tried to stand on two wobbly legs, using Brent to balance herself. Her back was on fire, the pain only compounded by her exhaustion. She refrained from looking at the others, finding the floor to be a more welcoming sight. She had too many things to focus on. The pain, her exhaustion, Zoe's actions, their victory, and everything she had just heard. None of this had to happen. "I'm fine," she quietly repeated, moving away from Brent, her legs just stable enough to carry her.
Oh, this was familiar, wasn't it? Brent's eyes narrowed, before pulling a chair over. Allison, what were her relationships with Evacuation Team again? He couldn't recall much of anything, but he also doubted that she had absolutely no friendships within that group of civilian-crushers. "Who're you trying to convince here? Yourself?" he said, not unkindly, "Take a seat at least. Deserve a break after the shit you managed to do."
"Thanks." Allison muttered, lowering herself into the seat. She took a moment to gauge her surroundings, something that her place on the ground had not allowed her to do. The building was, indeed, being lifted towards the evac point. It was probably the least important piece of information she had gained in the past few minutes. She had somehow earned a front row seat to the "People with Awful Morals" convention, listening to people she should be able to call allies tear each other apart. And Angel... Allison didn't want to believe it, but if it was true, then she was as right as ever. Good people don't exist. How often would she learn that lesson?
Allison shrunk down in her silence, leaning forward in the chair, resting her arms on her legs. Maybe it was just a dire situation, maybe an accident. Allison gave Ernie a second chance, so why not Angel? That didn't matter, not right now. Personal romantic trouble could be dealt with later, no matter whether murder was involved or not. What about the civilians? What was being done about those caught in the chaos? Likely nothing, if previous events were anything to go by. Allison's mind floated back to being surrounded by monsters disguised as people. A stupid, idealistic girl had no place in this world. In the end, all Allison really knew was that her back hurt.
The grim quiet seemed to spread throughout the room, it's occupants patiently awaiting the arrival at their destination.
As soon as the slime had been destroyed, Chris's driving will and anger ceased altogether. With nothing left to force his body forward the dragon-arbiter merely collapsed over the leftover slime before being carried off by Kadabra. His barely conscience state gleamed over the destruction of the city, for a moment he thought that he was in ground zero, but that delusion wasn't believable enough to console him.
Chris had failed.
He had failed to help his teammates, he had failed to save any civilians, and he had failed to kill any of these damned monsters. He had let everyone down with his cascade of poor decisions today, and it was this very self-loathing that made contemplate if he would even be upset if he was being dragged to some kind of firing squad or prison for his poor performance. Any sense of pride he once had was now shattered and broken.
While he was being carried off, he didn't revert his form yet. Perhaps it because he still wanted to feel that unbearable, now almost-numb pain to fixate some form of reality; Perhaps he wanted to avoid walking among his peers and superiors in a naked form, defeated by today's battle; Or perhaps it was merely some hidden caution of reverting his transformation while being moved in the air.
He wasn't able to pay attention to other students chatting away while being carried, though he didn't want to. The shame he felt made him grow distant from the others, their voices and the whole. Perhaps the only things he cared about now was of the lack of fellow casualities, he hoped to god that Angelique, or god forbid, Siena wasn't dead or worse. Hell he even hoped that Brent and Marcus weren't too messed up either despite his animosity towards them. Feelings like these are best kept inside, anyhow.
There was a beam of light that darted through some of the side rooms, shining through the dust and glittering off each individual piece as it floated in the air. The offender was none other than Marcus, who was currently looking for some secondary way out of the ruins. The sound of rumbling accompanied the shuffling of his footsteps as he gingerly wandered the length of the hallway he'd found himself in, unwilling to investigate any further lest he trigger another collapse - one that wouldn't be so kind to him.
"...Marcus...where are you guys? Are you alright?
He jumped at the sound of someone right beside him, nearly dropping his phone in his shock. The owner of the voice didn't even occur to him until he'd made a panicked scan of the hallway, eyes darting to and fro suspiciously.
"...Angel?" He said meekly, still looking around. There was no possible way she'd followed him down, was there? Last time he'd seen her, she'd barely been able to walk by herself.
He found Angel's name on his communicator, raising it to his mouth. There was no reason to panic everybody in their class by using the cuffs. Or, more importantly, let everybody know how bad his decision making was. "Hey Angel; Marcus here. I'm fine...tentatively. It's entirely possible I'm currently inside that mound of rubble we're currently parked on." he said, almost sheepishly.
On the other side of the ruined condo, Angรฉlique was starting to struggle on her own with the effects of the growing exhaustion she was feeling from her previous injuries and her overuse of her voice-projecting ability. While everyone was divided about helping in this scenario, the raven-haired Aberration had started to work as a teammate into this evacuation effort, even though her motives were different from the others. Still, she wanted to help, for her classmates' sake, just as intensely as she could.
The sky beginning to clear only added another layer to the young woman's hardships. Still with no sunglasses to shield her sensitive eyes to the bright rays of the sun, her vision began to blur as a sign of an overload. Soon enough, she started closing her eyes and putting her hands in front to shield them from the brightness, as her heard started to ache.
Getting an answer from Marcus over her cuff, she was shocked to know that he was inside the collapsing condo. Why was he in there? Was he also looking for survivors? But his powers were of no immediate use to rescue them. What was he thinking? Growing irritated, Angรฉlique reached out to him once more with her powers.
"What are you doing? The whole place is just about to collapse. Get out of there before everything comes down on your head." Angel's tired voice returned to Marcus' side, her irritation hinting at her growing exhaustion.
"Well...you're certainly spot on in your assement." Marcus said, his tone making it very hard to tell he was currently moments away from being crushed to death. "It's already collapsed a little bit...which may have trapped me down here. A little."
"WHAT!?" Angel's voice raised considerably, taken by surprise from the considerable dire news that Marcus seemed to be taking so lightly. A moment of silence to recollect her focus. "Alright alright, calm down. Siena is already using her powers to save trapped people, so she can surely get you out no problem if she can know your location."
An inaudible sigh came from Angel's own mouth this time, both clearly anxious and annoyed by what Marcus just told her. "Why the hell didn't you say so in the first place? Just... don't move, alright? I mean, unless you got a rock going to fall on your face. I'm going to get someone get you out of there."
"Alright, I'll just...hang out here then." Marcus said, looking around the ruined hallway. Wasn't exactly like he had any other plans.
Knowing Marcus was now in danger from getting crushed by the unstable mound of ruins, Angรฉlique lost no time in reaching out her Arbiter friend. Siena had just came out of nowhere from the rubbles, bringing children back with her. The message broadcasted from the cuffs earlier did not go unheard. She could sympathize with the possibly dead child, but for now they had to focus on getting one of their own from meeting the same fate. She reached out for the brunette girl with her magical voice, a faint but audible whisper coming to Siena's ears.
"Siena, it's Angรฉlique. Marcus is trapped somewhere in the ruins. Could you get to him before anything bad happens to him?"
There wasn't enough time for Siena to stop. A cold, rational voice told her that the building could fall at any moment, and trying to extend the time she could utilize a name had been the wrong choice. Always the wrong choice. The girl's mind ran through the situation at hand when Angelique's voice whispered in her ear. A chill crept up the brunette's spine--had she imagined it?
No, apparently not. Not long after, a second statement. Marcus was trapped in the building. For a moment, the Arbiter felt her mind go blank as it tried to sort the surge of emotion that rose to meet the thought. Anger, fear, frustration, hesitation, guilt, remorse, fear, what the hell was she supposed to make of that?
"Transmit. I can get to him if needed, but I need a general location." Hearing her voice out loud, Siena couldn't help but grimace faintly. It wasn't the fact that she couldn't keep the worn tone out of the words, it was the fact that they were painfully calm--no. That wasn't quite the word she was looking for. Distant was better. As though she'd had to put herself at a mental arm's length from the situation to keep herself from letting control escape from her again. "Marcus, you need to stay in a small radius, but if you can find any survivors nearby, then bring them with you."
Her mind went back to the child she couldn't save, and Siena felt her heart try to tear itself a little further away. There was no time to stop and grieve.
"I'm going to need a clear space nearby too. Over."
More rumbling punctuated the end of the sentence. Time was running out.
"Hello!? Anybody else in here?" Marcus shouted in response to Siena's remark about survivors. There was a long moment of silence before he went back to the cuff. "Transmit. Alright; I'm not seeing anything else in this place. Looks like I'm near a stair-"
Something stopped him midsentence. Had he actually heard something, or had he just been imagining things? He strained his ears to listen, only being rewarded with more silence.
"Hello!?" he shouted again, allowing the silence to echo some more.
There it was, a barely audible cry, somewhere close.
"Hang on, I think I've got more survivors." he said, briskly walking down the ruined halls after a slightly delayed. "Over."
"Hello!? Anybody here? Evacuation team; looking for survivors!"
"In here!"
The voice was faint, but he heard it. Another destroyed apartment room - 203 if the slightly askew wall plate was anything to go by.
"Transmit. Siena, I'm near room 203. Plenty of space in the hallway, sounds like there's survivors nearby. Over."
"Is someone out there?" a female voice from behind the door shouted.
"Evacuation team!"
Of one..
"Here to get you the hell out of this place!"
"Oh, thank god! We didn't know if it was safe to move."
"I mean...it's as safe as it's gonna get..." Marcus uneasily stammered. The brave heroics and keen leadership had gone right out the window when he'd found himself entombed. Right now, he probably wasn't inspiring any confidence - he wasn't a hero anymore, he was a little trapped boy.
A sense of anxiety gripped at Siena's chest for a moment before fading back into that cool, calculating mindset that the girl relied on to carry her through. 'Deep breaths, Siena. That's it...you want to be thinking straight when things happen.' She felt the last of Kitty's influence slip away, but was already moving on to her next mark. Faster, her mind demanded as she pulled at the name, letting the influence take over.
One jump is all you get.
God, she was so tired.
A faint pink mist was all that was left where the Arbiter once stood outside the building as she plunged back in. 'Awfully chipper today, kid. Bounce back already?' The mist was all that preluded her presence before her feet hit the floor with little more than a faint tap, the slightly heavier breathing being the better indication of Siena's appearance. As usual, Bounce transported her with near pinpoint accuracy, leaving only a few short strides to reach Marcus, her eyes drifting to the door.
"They're inside?" No time wasted. No time to stop. "I need to move us out quickly if I--" A pause as her brow furrowed slightly. "We want to help anyone else."
"Yeah, inside. Careful with the door though; last time I opened one I got stuck down here." Marcus said, jumping only slightly when Siena spoke. She could teleport - right; he was more than familiar with that little ability of hers.
"You got a plan?"
A brief nod.
"I'll bring you through with me. By then I should be able to pull an adequate name to move any survivors out safely." Thoughts of the building crumbling around them before she could manage it tried to pierce through the calm, so instead fo dwelling, Siena sent her gaze downward, the purple light coming to life. "I suggest grabbing my shoulder or my arm. There's very little margin for error here."
As soon as Siena mentioned holding onto her, Marcus's slightly-shaky hand clamped down firmly on her shoulder. There were too many variables freaking him out, first and foremost being that he still didn't have a super clear idea of how Siena's power worked. Apparently she could do anything, and long as she had some sort of literature to pull from? His mind raced back to that very first combat day. The clearest explanation he'd gotten.
Still, every time they came into contact with each other, it usually ended poorly for him. He didn't need to get his torso deleted by a piece of wall when they teleported.
"Alright. Ready." he said, the slightest traces of fear in his voice. Any mistakes now, and it would be far worse than a dry cleaning bill.
Hand on her shoulder. Good. The name started to pull from its source, letters peeling from the screen. Siena didn't let her eyes falter. There were a few things that could go wrong...but based on calculations, based on experience, the plan would workโฆ she hoped.
"Don't trip."
She felt the more powerful version of her mark take its place, felt an overwhelming sense of frustration and barely managed to curb it long enough to take a few rapid steps forward. A stronger version of Shadowcat, too strong to hold for as long as that dull, pathetic version that didn't know how to handle herself, but just right for the next phase of the plan, assuming nothing went wrong. The intangibility spread through her, to Marcus, and she pushed forward, through the door at fast enough clip to ensure the name wouldn't slip from her too soon.
"Don't...? A confused statement Marcus barely got out before Siena started to run. He dug his hand harder into her shoulder, probably uncomfortably so, and gave himself a burst of speed to keep up. No mistakes. Please god, no mistakes.
Siena was running. Don't let go.
The door was coming to meet them. His hand was slipping.
Siena disappeared through the door. She was going too fast..
His face went through the door. Couldn't hold on..
They were mostly through. He faltered..
His hand slipped off Siena's shoulder, and he stumbled into the room, only barely managing to keep his balance. There was something wrong. The arm that hadn't been holding Siena felt cold...colder than before. His heart skipped a beat, his face went numb, and it took a full second before he forced himself to look. It was bad, he knew it. He'd have to rewind. He'd lose his arm if he didn't rewin-
His sleeve fluttered freely, the back part of it sheared cleanly off, leaving the front to flap annoyingly. His arm was fine. He was fine.
The two civilians gaped at the entrance, eyes staring at the teenagers before settling on their white marks. The woman who had called out blinked and her expression immediately soured.
"You said evacuation team," she grimaced.
"We can leave if you'd prefer." Marcus said, his voice shaking uncontrollably. That had almost gone terribly wrong. As wrong as it probably could have. And he wasn't sure whether to be scared, cry, or just be absolutely pissed. She'd not even given him a countdown, and he'd almost gotten cut in half because he wasn't prepared.
Fortunately, there was someone else to direct his irritation towards.
"No!" the other occupant in the room, a man who looked somewhere between middle-aged and elderly sped forward, "No, please, we need to get out."
A larger tremor consumed the room, dislodging some large bits of ceiling behind the regulars. Instinctively, they both moved to Siena and Marcus, fear evident in their wide eyes.
'We don't have time to argue.' The words were like gunfire. A sharp crack that made itself noticeable despite the chaos. God, she was so tired. Before she had fully registered the number of people, Siena had set the next part of her plan into motion, her blood pounding in her ears, some distant part of her shrieking for rest. Color bled once more into her eyes, another round of fear-laced calm.
The tremor struck, and the brunette held back her grimace, held back the flinch. She wasn't done yet, and there wouldn't be enough time for a real transmission. She'd accepted that earlier, had picked her names in a distinct order. Two teleporters, one for spatial awareness, one for remote teleportation. The limits of both were reduced, but it would be enough.
It had to be enough.
"Just...stay still for a second...please..." She used her hands as a method of focus, making sure she had Marcus and both survivors in view. They'd have to land in the same place--a strange sense that didn't normally exist seemed to provide an instinctive knowledge of yes and no when she thought of places to put them. It took only an instant, but the ordeal felt much longer, like the last stretch of a marathon. Near...the truck? Yes, said that bizarre instinct she was borrowing.
Siena inhaled, braced herself for the exhaustion that would siege her, and as she released, sent the survivors in view out of the building like a soft breeze.
"Alright, just promise you'll give me some sort of coun-" Marcus started, standing at attention.
Outside, the two survivors and Marcus hit the ground hard, garnering the attention of some shocked bystanders. The woman looked as if she was going to throw up but stood shakily, giving a passing glance to Marcus. Ultimately, she decided to ignore the teen, opting instead to help the man up by the arm and limp silently towards the evacuation point.
"-tdOWN!"
Marcus finished his sentence in midair, hitting the rocky surface of the ground hard - which would have knocked the air out of him if he hadn't been in the middle of talking.
God he hated teleportation.
He rolled over to his back, taking a second to catch his breath and look at the sky. And then pull the particularly sharp rock out from under his spine. Finally, after what seemed like minutes to him, but was only a few seconds in the real world, he sat up, shaking the confusion from his head.
"Transmit. Alright Siena, we're outside, all accounted for. Bring yourself up and we'll start heading out. Over."
The name slipped away like smoke, pushing away from her fingers--not that Siena had any reason to try and keep her hold. She knew from the start that it wouldn't last. Stumbling, the brunette felt her legs moving in an attempt to keep her standing. If she sat, if she stopped, she might not have the willpower to get back on her feet and start moving again. So she walked. One heavy pace after another--her footsteps didn't sound as heavy as they felt...perhaps she should have just sat down--until her cuff came to life with voice again.
All accounted for. That was good.
"Transmit."
A pause as Siena realized she didn't know what she was going to say.
"Lost the teleporter faster than I expected. I don't know if it's safe here to stop and try to get another." Only a partial lie. Truth be told, Siena doubted that she could take a name that would bring her safely out the building and into a familiar space--not one that would get her out in time, based on the building's condition. Thankfully, nobody was around to see the cracks on her usual mask forming even as she spoke. "I'll move somewhere more stable and be out soon. Don't let anyone try coming into the building. Over."
"What!? What do you mean you lost the teleporter!?" Marcus shouted from his position on the surface. Although, the fact that he'd forgotten to transmit meant that he was shouting at nothing, save for a few nearby survivors who might have heard him. Siena's words brought an equal amount of panic and confused frustration to him, a set of emotions that took more than a few moments to subside.
It was fine - she'd managed to herself in there to rescue him. She could certainly get herself back out just as easily. After all, that was her power; she could do anything.
"Transmit. Alright...just...be careful down there, Siena. We're not going to leave without you, so stay safe and get back out as soon as you can. Over."
She kept moving like a clockwork soldier, the images on her phone's screen cutting to darkness in the idle moments before she tried another name to make a getaway. She just...needed some time to recover. Forcefully shoving the weariness from her mind, Siena did the only other thing she knew she could do.
"Is there anyone still here?"
A silence followed before distant footsteps pattered towards Siena's location. "Yeah? You there?"
Blue eyes peeked from around the corner, narrowing as they caught sight of Siena. A dust-covered woman stepped out and looked the Arbiter up and down.
"How did you get in here?"
Another person trapped in the building? A mixture of relief that there was someone else alive and mild concern. A teleport that could bring her safely out of the building wasn't too difficult, but one that could bring more than that was questionably safe at best. And that aside...was it really important to know how someone was in the building? The Arbiter felt her mind zero in on the white mark--maybe it was a fair enough question. For all the woman knew, Siena could have been one of the ones that brought the building down to begin with.
"Not the way that I can get us out," the girl claimed. "I teleported, but I don't think I can get both of us safely that way." Or either of them, if she wanted to be completely honest. She kept her grip on her phone. Lifeline, she reminded herself. "Were there others with you?"
At the mention of others the woman looked away. "I've been looking around. Most of the people I've found are...dead. But there was a room with I think three inside. I've dug two of 'em out."
She sighed, obviously exhausted after being trapped in unstable darkness for an hour.
"There's no way they're walking out on their own two feet. Not to mention the last one still under all that crap. I'll take you to 'em."
Her words proved true as she led Siena down a smaller hallway. The small suite's walls had been thoroughly crushed, creating a mound within the mound. A man and woman, both with distorted legs, lay near the entrance, breathing faintly.
Siena followed after the woman, grateful for the moment of reprieve as she felt the muscles in her face pull her lips into a tight, uncomfortable frown. Three others on top of the woman and--
"Oh...my god..." Compared to the previous survivors, the group here was in significantly worse shape. A single look was all it took for Siena to understand that the woman was right--nobody in the room was going to be walking out of the building on their own. The heroic names she'd taken since the disaster started left her with a sense of discomfort. A hard, gripping sensation at her chest that Siena struggled to identify as an actual emotion. 'There's no way I can teleport all these people out.' But they couldn't walk, and what the hell was she supposed to do?
An eerie silence greeted the unspoken question. She didn't know. Her thumb tapped her phone screen until it lit up, and Siena kept trying to be brave despite the horror that settled in. She didn't know. The countless experiences from the literature she took her power from didn't compare to the reality. A careful breath as she tried to prioritize--the feeling of warm skin beneath her fingers and no pulse--what had to be done first. If everyone was in close proximity with each other, then maybe...
Once more. The purple light flickered to life, its luminescence duller than before, as though trying to reflect how drained the Arbiter was. She ignored it as the letters crept from the screen. Tired. She was unbelievably tired, but that didn't stop her mind from trying to work out a plan. "I'll try to bring her out." Her movements felt heavy and sluggish, as though trying to swim through thick cream, but the mage didn't let herself falter as she refocused herself and sank once more into the rubble.
A younger man was unearthed, his legs broken from the concrete's impact in the same fashion as the other two. A groggy moan escaped his lips but he said nothing otherwise.
"Okay," the woman nodded as soon as the rescued was set down safely, "What do we do now?"
"We...ugh..." A wave of nausea that she hadn't felt in a long time. No, she was fine. Siena forced herself to focus, took a deep breath. "S-Sorry. Let me see..." Her eyes gazed over the group. Only one person that was in any condition to really walk, which meant phasing everyone out wasn't a feasible option. Most forms of teleportation wouldn't be a good option either in their current state, and the strain it would enact might be too much. A grisly image of bringing only part of the rescues with her nixed the idea immediately.
But...didn't she know another way?
"I can make a doorway. They won't have to walk through it, but it'll probably aggravate their injuries when we land." Which was better than dying, admittedly, but Siena kept that to herself. "I will do my best to keep things stable, but I don't think I can completely prevent it."
"That's..." the woman frowned but her hesitation stopped as more rumbling filled the air, "I can't speak for these guys but we've got no other choice. Do it fast."
Another rumble as Siena nodded, pushing the strangely muted sense of fear down her throat as she quickly split the attention of her phone apart, two sources making themselves available at once. The light returned, flickering a few times before holding steady in a dim, faded sense as her marks peeled themselves from the so-called "pages" before her, a dark color pooling in each iris until it seemed to flood, replacing the grey.
She couldn't quite breathe.
"Okay..." True to Siena's word, a door did seem to cut itself into the earth beneath the group. "We're getting out of here." Her fingers wrapped around the doorknob, twisted it, and all at once the door gave way, dropping the group into what should have been nothing but ground...if Door hadn't been a better name than all that.
When the daylight breached Siena's attention, she gasped, tried her best to use the last vestiges of her strength to slow their brief descent, but the name slipped through her fingers before she could muster the focus to utilize it fully. The most she managed was a small, quick burst of air that did little to slow the speed at which they landed. She hit the floor, her shoulder hitting the ground, but somewhere between the exhaustion and the surprise, the Arbiter felt numbed to the sensation.
No sooner had Siena landed than Marcus had rushed over to her - her and the four other people that she had apparently brought with her. They all looked pretty bad - most of the survivors with her had their legs completely smashed and mangled. Something that probably wasn't life threatening, but it was hard to tell how many internal injuries they'd suffered. He was no doctor, so there was no way for him to help with that; all he could do was making sure they were alive for now.
The shallow, but still visible breaths indicated they were, including Siena; a fact that caused him to release his own held breath. He ran his fingers through his hair once, before extending an arm down to hers.
"C'mon kiddo. Let's get you up; you did good in there."
'Get up.' But she was so tired. 'You think you have any right to complain?' No, she didn't. Even as the pain settled in over her shoulder as a blunt ache, Siena willed herself to try and push herself up. Tired, bitter, frustrated, guilty, so tired. She set her gaze on Marcus's extended arm for a moment, the fog unwilling to lift, the meaning of the gesture escaping her for longer than it should have. A quiet, longing voice chimed in.
Take his hand. You need the help.
But it was drowned out by a multitude of other voices. She had to be strong. She didn't need help, didn't want help, didn't...didn't deserve it. Pushing herself to a sitting position, the brunette glanced up at her roommate. "I'm fine." Not really. With a sharp exhalation of effort, the Arbiter managed to push herself to her feet, feeling unsteady before she'd even straightened. Immediately, her focus went back to the building. She couldn't make it back in, she knew that for a fact. But...she still had to do something, didn't she?
"How many people do you think are still in there...?"
Marcus sighed, dropping his hand and looking back to where he'd originally entered. The destroyed hallway wasn't even visible anymore - just another section of rubble in a landscape of the stuff. With how big this place had been originally, and considering the fact that it had originally been a condo...how many people were still trapped down there?
Too many.
But he said nothing, a deafening silence that probably answered the question more than he would have liked.
"...I thought so too." Her eyes lingered over the building, acknowledging that there was no way in for any normal person. A hollow fatigue seemed to fill Siena at the thought, but she felt her feet moving before her mind could catch up. She could still do something, even if she couldn't get in. She had to.
"Siena." Marcus said, planting a firm grasp on her shoulder. "We've done enough. Any more and you're going to start hurting yourself."
Don't touch.
"I'm fine with that." The mask didn't hold in place, chipped away until it was dangerously close to crumbling. No, not really fine with it, but she deserved it, right? "If that's all, please. Let go."
"No." Marcus said sternly, refusing to relinquish his grasp. "Exactly how do you think you're going to be able to help any more in your state? If you go down there, you're not going to come back up." Even from what he could see, the poor girl was exhausted. If she used her powers anymore, she'd probably drop; and if that happened in the basement of a collapsing building...he wasn't going to allow it.
"Do you think anyone would really care?" A quiet question that Siena knew the answer to already. "I can go, and I can probably help a few more people before the building goes down. If I happen not to be one of the ones that comes out, then it's just one more--" the word "monster" tried to escape her, but the filter clamped down, changed the meaning before it could leave her lips. "--subnatural that happened to die in the process. Nobody would care."
A pause as she took a breath. Calmed the sudden, violent surge of emotion that threatened to break free, then released them as a quiet exhalation.
"I was too weak to keep the cars from crushing anyone, I can at least keep a few people from a building."
Marcus nearly reeled at the statement, so taken aback he was. Is this honestly what Siena felt? Underneath that rich, peppy exterior? Or was she just feeling everything from the Evacuation incident do strongly right now? They'd all made mistakes...but none of them deserved to die for it.
Still...in her position, would he be any different?
"Siena. If you think I'm going to let another one of us die, you are out of your mind. I'm your roommate. Your friend. And I'm not going to allow you to kill yourself." his voice was growing lower; angrier almost. After everything...she just wanted to give up? Absolutely not.
"You think my plan is to go in and di--" Whoa, calm down, Siena. That's not you. And she stepped back from the sudden flash of frustration. Not her. Not her. Little Harker--not her. "I don't have time for this argument." Clearly Marcus wasn't going to let her go, but at what point was it a matter of him allowing her to do anything?
She tapped the screen of her phone to life, eyes darting toward it, a flicker of purple daring to rise before sinking again as she tore the first source aside with a swipe. There were better ways to get in.
Marcus's eyes widened in surprise when Siena brought out the phone again. She was really going to do it, wasn't she? It didn't matter if she wasn't planning on dying - it was what would happen, regardless of her plans. Even with him standing here begging her not to do it.
His eyes flicked from phone screen to the back of Siena's head. The familiar glow of the phone, similar to what she'd done down below in the hallway. That was it - the one thing standing between Siena and certain death. If she didn't have her phone...
Fine.
'It should be fine if I use--'
With his hand on her shoulder, Siena's body froze in place - sparking at the edges and flickering like an old, corrupted computer screen. He wasn't happy with the outcome, the things he had to do to protect his friends. Even from themselves.
With hand locked in place, the phone was relatively easy to pry from her grasp. Fortunately for him (or her, depending on how one wanted to look at the situation) the phone had an easily accessible battery - one of those ones that could be easily replaced. He snapped the back off, prying out the battery, before locking the protective cover back on.
"Sorry." he muttered, though he knew she wouldn't be able to hear him. Slipping the phone awkwardly back into her hand, he gave the battery one long look. A look of contemplation, regret, some guilt; of so many different emotions, before turning and throwing it as hard as he could somewhere into the landscape of rocks and debris.
'--another gho...?'
The screen was dark where it had been luminous before. The words were gone. Confusion ripped to the forefront. How? She tapped the screen, as though oblivious to her surroundings. Nothing. She tapped it again. Nothing. Her fingers pressed at the power button, at the volume, at anything that might get the phone to react, and she was rewarded with the same void.
Every emotion was suddenly quieted, a silent fanfare for the flood of mind-numbing panic came to drown her. No, no, no. No, bad, no. No. Grey eyes darted from screen to surroundings. What happened? What the fuck happened? What little was left of the brave mask Siena had tried to piece together came crumbled into dust as her mind tried to process the reality. No phone. No phone, no reader, no books, no...no sources. Another thrill of panic as the grey eyes snapped toward her roommate. How? He didn't have the power to do something like that, did he? She tried to reason it out, but fear clogged her senses, stopped every rational thought.
"Wh-What did you do?!" None of that calm, none of the frustration, nothing but a sense of horror that threatened to gut her. There were people there, and she had no sources. What did he do?!
"Relax." Marcus said, his tone more frustrated than anything. He shouldnโt have to resort to using his powers on his friends to keep them from killing themselves. It seemed like common sense to him, at least.
"I chucked your battery. Should be easy enough to get another when we get back to USARILN."
"Y-You wh-what?" It felt as though the ground was about to give way under her, the steady, solid voice of the brave little soldier replaced by the terrified child that she'd managed to hide behind all those names, all the masks that took the form of printed letters pressed into her neck. No battery. Her heart skipped a few beats before breaking into a full gallop, her hearing filled with nothing but the sound of her own blood rushing through her ears. "No, nonono, no, I can't be here without...no, nono..."
Siena tore her eyes away from her roommate, from her phone. Her grip tightening until her knuckles turned white on the device. The comfort that it usually provided did not rise as she tried to scan the field in vain for a glimpse of the lost battery. The longer that she went without the comfort, the harder the fear squeezed, until it was crushing her in a vice grip, refusing to let her breathe. Can't breathe. "No, nono, Icanfindone." The words were little more than a quiet, chanted whisper that Siena didn't seem to hear herself saying. No sources, no stability, you shouldn't be out here.
The frustration in Marcus's face was starting to be coated with a light dusting of confusion. He'd thrown a battery; it wasn't like it'd be hard to fix when they got back. Hell, he'd even been nice enough to not throw the phone, because it was probably her own one from home. Lots of personal effects on those kind of things, and he wasn't a total asshole.
At least...not usually. Today seemed to be a beginning of something terrible for him.
"You're seriously that determined to go down there and get crushed to death?" Marcus said in disbelief, crossing his arms where he stood.
What?
Her attention was wrenched back to her roommate, focus yanked back into one point with such sudden force from its scattered locations that Siena couldn't help but feel a brief moment of surprise surface for an instant. 'He doesn't understand,' said the rational voice that normally won. 'You don't tell anyone, how is he supposed to know?'
She didn't quite hear that reasonable voice.
"I need a source." The words were muffled beyond the deafening roar of panic, and her voice rose to match the pace of her heart. "I never went outside before I got this mark, I never go out without one." Words spilled from her mouth before she could stop them, broken up with hyperventilation that she tried desperately to control. Somewhere in the back of her head there was a disappointed tsk at the behavior, as though giving in to panic was unsightly, and still she felt her hand shake, felt the nausea and dizziness try to strike her down while her heart still galloped.
"So what?" Marcus said, his voice growing a bit more unsure. He was fully aware that there was a key component of this that he wasn't aware of - something he'd either forgotten or just not been told entirely, and the whole situation was beginning to become a jumbled mess in his head. He was already fairly confused as to how her power even worked, but he'd managed to figure out enough to stop her. This was something else entirely though.
"You can't last for a few hours without a power on you...? he asked, more questions already springing into his mind.
"It's n-not like th-tha...hahh..." Panic, breathe. Breathe. The mental demands to calm herself worked about as well as trying to punch the ocean. A few shaky breaths, a cautious step back. No sources. No phone, no names, no masks, no Maya. Everything felt wrong, no, worse than wrong. She would have felt safer precariously balanced on one leg on a cliff side than she did at that moment. She felt her legs stagger faintly to try and balance her against the nausea. Part of her wanted to curl up and cry, the other part demanded that she bolt for some form of safety. Siena couldn't find the strength to do either course of action. Can't breathe. Can'tbreathecan'tbreathecan'tbreathe.
Now Marcus was sure there was more he was missing here. Siena was having a full scale panic attack, simply because he'd taken away her access to her powers. Sure, he felt a little uneasy without his backups, especially when using his latest power, but this was way more intense than even that.
"Woah, now!" He surged forward slightly as she stumbled, ready to at least try and catch her if she fell, but she managed to stay on her own two feet. "Jesus Siena, take a deep breath. Slowly. Relax for a second. If you're concerned with being vulnerable, then you can crawl into the front of the truck - nobody is going to touch you there."
Or else.
If any emotion could have overridden the foreboding sense of doom quickly piling onto Siena's shoulders, it might have been frustration, maybe anger. Relax? Even as the girl's breath caught in her throat, she knew that wasn't going to happen. The means to control rampant, violent emotions was long gone, and though her fingers were still pressed tight against the power button of her phone, the brunette knew nothing would come of it. She knew that calming down would have been preferable, but how was she supposed to do that? She felt her muscles tense. Can't breathe.
She tried to say something. Nothing came from her throat, though she tried to say it. I'm trying. Nothing there, so she shut her mouth after two attempts.
Can't breathe.
Maybe he was right, maybe it was safer, safer in the truck. Where she would be alone. every, violent, rampaging emotion that she no longer had control over. Without her safety net. Another surge of fear rose like bile. She felt herself shake her head briefly, stopped herself and felt a tremble seize her core. Can't breathe. Alone with herself or out with no sources, no good options. Nowhere safe. No way to feel as though she could tear herself away at a moment's notice with a flicker of light and another blanket of emotion to smother the flames. Siena took a shuddering breath, tried to count to ten, but couldn't hold it in that long.
She managed, with more effort than it should have taken, a barely audible phrase.
"Won't help."
The crowd refused to disperse. It only seemed to gather with more fervor, bystanders clambering up the mounds as shouts varying between excitement and desperation reached the ears of others. News of a healer. The throng enveloped the short blonde girl in no time, obscuring her from sight. Excavation efforts slowed and Tony looked up from his private tragedy to frown.
"What the fuck?" he murmured, "They're all getting in the way."
Golden eyes grew wide as people began crowding around the small blonde teenager. She didn't expect that her last healing act would create so much uproar. It had been an act of good faith and in a way, repentance for the deaths she had caused earlier. She didn't really think that the people around her would care to pay attention to an X marked mage. People...Regulars are selfish. They will only care about themselves, their injuries, their pain. By showing them that you can heal, you damned yourself.
But I damned them first, came Lily's meeker voice in her head, contrasting with the stronger, callous voice.
"Hey! What are you waiting for? Heal us," a male voice in the crowd demanded.
The Aberration turned her eyes towards the man who had called out. She was tired. She didn't want to argue. And most of all, she wanted to make up for the lives she took-if she could even make up for that. And if she'd die this day trying to save people she should have tried protecting in the first place, then she would. She was a healer. There was no excuse for what she did earlier, stigma or no stigma. The black thread that signaled her turning on her power materialized on her wrist. It's other end wrapped itself around the demanding man's wrist and instantaneously transferred his sprained ankle to her. She stumbled and tried to shift her weight to her uninjured foot.
One after the other, she healed--or more accurately, took onto herself the injuries of the people that collected around her. Small injuries...sprains, cuts, bruise... But as she took them one after the other, she grew exhausted and had to sit down on the ground, completely hidden in the middle of the throng.
Emmaโs attention was taken by the mill of the developing crowd. She turned suddenly, noting the apparent absence of Lily, quickly piecing together what was happening before her in her head.
โShit.โ Emma muttered under her breath. What was Lily thinking, healing without her, taking the wounds for herself? A sharp sigh escape Emmaโs lips before she got up, giving a small glance towards Tony before approaching the edge of the crowd. Any attempt to spot Lily was to no avail- the people were clamoring for healing without regard towards the healer, of course. They all had their own tragedy to deal with, but Emma couldnโt let them corner Lily.
Emma stood up on the tips of her toes, cupping a hand around her mouth, โLily! Are you alright?!โ she shouted, trying to be heard over the mob of people surrounding the healer.
Taking a deep breath, Lily took on a bigger injury--a large gash on a pregnant woman's arm. The pain and the demands of the growing crowd made it impossible for her to hear Emma calling out to her. As soon as the wound opened up on her arm and completely healed the woman, the crowd erupted in a raucous cheer, both encouraging and at the same time offending to the small girl's ears.
What sort of gratification are you getting from this 'Good Samaritan' act? Are these people really worth it? Give the injuries back. Kill them. Maim them. Make them regret ever demanding healing from you. The words in her head were becoming harsh again.
I don't really care anymore, came Lily's own meek voice in her head.
While the people demanded for more healing, the pregnant woman she had just healed eyed her bleeding arm, a horrified look on her face. She reached up, uncoiled the thin blue scarf that was around her neck and kneeled in front of the injured Aberration. "You're hurt. You heal by taking on the injuries of others," she said simply, offering her hand to the mage.
Lily, not expecting a Regular to show her kindness, looked up. She didn't say anything but nodded.
"Then stop. You can't take them all. What's your name?" the woman spoke gently.
Golden eyes met blue ones and a few seconds passed before Lily spoke her name just loud enough for the woman to hear. "Lily."
"Lily. That's a pretty name. My name is Trina. Thank you for taking my injuries. Will you let me try to help you stop that bleeding?" she asked just as gently, extending her hand a little closer to the healer.
Lily's eyes darted towards the growing crowd before she turned her attention back to Trina and finally laid her arm on her outstretched hand. Around them, people were shouting angry words about why the healing stopped. But two men who were healed earlier stood between Trina, Lily and the crowd. They extended their arms out to keep the crowd away as though bodyguards guarding a celebrity. Of course, they were no questions asked that they were there to protect their pregnant companion and not the mage.
"Back off everyone! Can't you see she's hurt?" Trina shouted, her hands adeptly trying the scarf securely and tightly around Lily's arm in an attempt to stop the bleeding.
"Just because you were healed doesn't mean that that Subnatural should stop healing the rest of us," another male voice demanded. "Look at how many still need help!"
True to his word, a myriad of civilians were still bleeding from a range of wounds. Though many of them had walked themselves up to the mound, there were many who were being helped up by bystanders or family desperate to get their loved ones healed.
"Jordan, it's plain to see that she's hurt....if my husband was here right now, he'd smack you for talking back to me. Shut up and help me get this girl up. She's hurt and can't take any more of anybody's injuries if she can't be healed herself..." she paused and then turned back towards Lily. "How do you...?
"Transfer," Lily muttered a single word as though it was enough explanation for the Regular. Trina was about to ask more questions but the impatient crowd pushed towards them and made her stumble forward. "Hey!" she called out angrily.
"We need to be healed too! Give her to us!"
Emma gritted her teeth. No sign of Lily. This was bad and was only going to get worse as the crowd grew. Sheโd need to intervene- based on what she knew about Lily the girl was undoubtedly taking everyoneโs injuries on herself. Emma had no choice but to try pushing through- sheโd start by herself, but was ready to call on Determination if things got bad. She started trying to make her way in, pushing people gently aside if she had to, continuing to call out for the trapped healer.
Trina scowled. "Look at her! She's barely standing as it is."
"She wasn't so injured before. What if she can vanish those wounds and she's holding herself back to look like she can't take anymore?" a woman tightly grasping her bleeding son's arm pressed against the impromptu bodyguards, "I can't fix his head on my own. Give me that sub!"
The crowd surged forward, breaking the two men's stances and shoving them off their feet. Hands from all directions began grabbing at the healer, though the clear misdirection of attention allowed Emma to slip through to Lily easily enough.
Emma made it through the crowd, but the situation proved dire. The crowd was grabbing at Lily, demanding healing, demanding her help. They werenโt unjustified, but Emma had to stop this- it was far too dangerous. But she hesitated, unsure of the best way to handle the situation. If she threatened the crowd they would readily turn on her, but she if she didnโt do enough they wouldnโt be dissuaded from pressuring Lily. Her first concern was making sure Lily transferred her injuries off of herself, but there was little room for Determination.
Emma turned around, glancing back towards the edge of the crowd. Determination appeared where she was looking. โPush through to me, but do it carefully! Donโt hurt anyone!โ Emma called over the din of the crowd.
In the chaos, Lily let herself be grabbed, her dulled golden eyes staring blankly at the woman who tried to protect her and then at the rioting people as they demanded to be healed. The weight of what she had done earlier and the cutting words Kusari said to her pulled her mood down to its lowest point that she no longer cared if the strip of cloth Trina wrapped around her arm came off or when she felt a sharp pain ran up her leg when someone grabbed her sprained ankle. As the voices in her head argued and demanded and as the people continued trying to grab her, she caught sight of Emma. Good thing she's okay... was her first thought and then slowly turned her head when she heard her words.
The tulpa waded through the crowd at a painfully slow pace, staying true to its master's command. The sight of the shadow creature prompted a few civilians to back away, though not nearly enough to disperse the dangerous gathering.
Surely enough, Lily saw the shadowy figure of Emma's Tulpa walking at a snail's pace towards them. I have to transfer my...injuries...and maybe try to heal others to stop this...mess. But her thoughts were interrupted with the violent words of her stigma. Hurt them! Kill them! Do not heal them! NONE of them deserves your help!
Her thoughts turned dark. Or just let them tear me apart. No more confusion, no more violence, no more difficult life. No more trying to be good when I can't be. No more disappointing people I think of as friends and family. A small yelp of pain escaped her lips when someone grabbed her arm, the person's finger digging into the gash she took from Trina and making it bleed all over again. She stared at the crimson red fluid as it trickled down her arm.
Confusion.
Ernie's words echoed faintly in her head this time. Something about surviving, of being important. But as always, her stigma got in the way of clear thoughts. No one needs you. They all deserve to die. when they all die, you'll no longer be hurt.
Kusari was nearing the end of her rope. First people attack them for no reason when they were here to help, now they were close to trampling a girl like rabid dogs just for committing the sin of trying to take their pain away. They were selfish, only thinking of themselves, only being charitable and understanding when it was convenient for them.
Who the hell were they to treat them like this anyway? These regulars were objectively inferior to them, yet her and the others had slave collars slapped onto them and were treated like disposable weaponry. What gave them the right? The authority of the majority? The superiority of the authority? Her mind swirled with dark thoughts like a whirlpool of muddy water. She was sick and tired of all of this. She didn't move from where she stood in front of the truck. She just watched the crowd around Lily, waiting, hoping for them to give her an excuse to tear them apart.
Determination caught up to Emma, while Emma kept pushing towards Lily. She shot a glance back at her tulpa and then at Lily, โLily! You need to transfer your injuries, then we can worry about getting out of this crowd.โ Emma sounded confident, but to her the words felt hollow. How the hell was she going to get Lily out of here? She had no plan and lacked the will to put her friendโs life over the mass of peopleโฆ they didnโt deserve to get hurt for this, or worse yet die for this, did they? They just want healing, how could that be wrong in a situation like this?
Emma pushed the thoughts away. One thing at a time. Lilyโs injuries first.
Whether or not Emma's words reached the healer, Determination remained uninjured, stock still by Emma's side despite the shoving from the crowd. There was no sign of the healer under all those grasping limbs now and though Lily failed to respond, the same couldn't be said for the handful of suddenly hostile civilians that caught Emma's declaration.
"So she can heal herself," a different woman narrowed her eyes, "Do you think we're just going to let you take her away?"
Kusari had begun to make her way to the middle of the crowd of vultures surrounding Lily. Their sense of entitlement was beginning to exceed even her jaded imagination. What little sympathy was shown was simply drowned out by those eager to get their share of the subnatural pie. Some of the crowd got out of her way after seeing her claws, some she just pushed, but she made it to the center all the same.
"I'm curious." Kusari said, now standing next to the woman that had threatened Emma and Lily. "Just what will you do if we try to take her away? She can't keep healing people after all, she will die."
"Didn't that girl just say she could transfer her injuries?" she glared, "That's why the shadow thing is here, right? I doubt she's going to let herself die like this."
"Well aren't you the expert." Kusari said with a condescending grin. "Perhaps you could explain to me how she can replenish her blood then. She can't get that back so easily after all." Kusari said, absentmindedly clicking her metallic claws against each other.
"That's not my problem. She's the one gladly taking these injuries."
Kusari felt disgusted from the pit of her stomach. They were perfectly willing to let this girl die in order to heal them. Pathetic... Disgusting... Human garbage. Kusari wanted to take this woman's head off, but she hadn't really given her a good reason to. "That's right. It's not your problem, not at all. She shouldn't be your solution either." Kusari turned towards Lily and reached down to pick her up. Those desperately grabbing at her let go upon seeing her approach. She lifted the girl into her arms, taking care not to cut her with her claws. "Hurry up and get rid of those wounds, it's pissing me off seeing them on you."
Though Lily was successfully unearthed the throng remained relentless, continuing to swarm the subnaturals like ravenous seagulls.
Angรฉlique had been listening with intent at her cuff's voice blaring into life as Siena and Marcus exchanged words concerning their rescue plan. With Sienaโs powers, those people, Marcus included, were in safe hands now. She did however got worried when Siena apparently did not come back, deciding to save a few more people inside the ruined condo before heading out herself. Unfortunately, she was blind to what was happening all around her, as her eyes would not open, fearing the burning rays of the light. She did hear the crowd getting rowdy over Lilianna, but some sort of fear mixed with exhaustion pinned Angel on her sitting spot. If Lily was getting mobbed from this crowd, the obsidian-haired Aberration feared she would repeat what happened earlier, make it worse even. And anyway, itโs not like she was going to be able to move anytime soon, in her current condition. The least she could do was hoping that Kusari heard her words earlier and protect Lily.
For now, all that she could do was rest and try gaining what little bit of strength she would need for later. But there was so much to do; so many possibilities with her voice, even more now that she managed to find a good use to her power along with Sophiaโs. It may not be much, but with Grant helping with the digging, they actually made quite a good excavation team. Even though Angel was exhausted, physically and mentally, and starting a headache, she was willing to put a maximum of effort to finish things up here and join the rest of the class, or at least send the others to help those fighting the monsters. Worry only grew the more time they spent here instead of helping their friends.
โSophiaโฆโ Angรฉlique called out, her magical whispers reaching out to the girlโs ears, as the young woman did not know whether Sophia was still next to her, her eyes shielded by her hand. โYou alright? Think you can find more survivors to dig out?โ
Though Sophia tried to pay attention to the conversation being held through the cuffs while looking out for survivors, she ended up tuning out most of what was going on in the end. It had worried her to hear that Marcus was actually stuck under the rubble, but once she knew that Siena was going to get him out she made herself focus on other things. Siena had seemed nice when she had met her, Siena wouldn't leave a classmate to dig themselves out.
It wasn't that pointing out survivors was hard work, not with Angel doing the real pinpointing and with Grant digging. But she still wasn't feeling back to normal, and all the prone bodies around her overwhelmed her and took her attention away from other things. One by one she watched as people were slowly unearthed from the rubble, remaining seated most of the time except for times when she walked from pile to pile to get a better angle.
Her power could only remain on for ten minutes though, so it was too soon that she had to stop. It was only then that she realized how the general noise volume of the area had risen, noting with dismay the crowd that had formed nearby. What was going on over there? She soon found out when Emma went to call out to Lily, but as much as Sophia longed to help her friend some way, she knew she couldn't. I hope Emma can handle it. Trying again to turn on her power to no avail, she sat there for a while, watching Grant finish unearthing the person she had pointed out before her power had run out.
I should go tell him I can't point out anymore. It was then, though, that Angรฉlique's voice reached out to her. Looking back at the Aberration some feet away, she frowned. Sophia had noticed how exhausted her classmate looked, but now... there was something more wrong than blood loss. Looking at the hand shielding her eyes, Sophia was reminded of how Angรฉlique was always wearing shades. Walking over to Angรฉlique, Sophia hesitated before sitting next to her. She didn't answer the question about whether she was alright, only responding to the second part. "Y-yeah I can..." she whispered, "So many." Most of them dead.
Then she made herself ask the same question that she had burst out at Angรฉlique for asking, because Sophia at least had a good reason for asking this time. Because Angรฉlique really didn't look right. "You... alright?"
โOh yeah, this day couldnโt get any better.โ
The fallen idol answered with a sarcasm-heavy tone, chuckling nervously as she realized just how pitiful she must be looking right now. Not that she had anything against Sophiaโs question, or the girl herself, despite their recent bout, but her corroded patience leaked a cynic behavior unwillingly. How ironic, for Angel to be the one making sure everyone was alright, only to be asked in turn if she was the one feeling well. It sort of irked her to show this much signs of weakness, but at this point it was either struggling to keep awake or let go and black out. She didnโt want to burden and worry the others with another inanimate body, so she kept on fighting the fatigue.
โNothing to be worried about. Just a bit exhausted from all this and getting a migraine now that the sun is starting to come out. Itโs all good though. Whenever youโre ready, just tell me and Iโll try giving the location to Grant.โ
Angรฉlique's sarcasm was outwardly met with nothing but a blink and a slight grimace, though inside the reaction was different. ...payback for earlier? She's not going to forget what I said, is she? A new bout of anxiety was triggered, and now Sophia tensed. Okay, fine. If that was the answer that was the answer, but Angรฉlique really, really didn't look good.
Just a migraine? Seemed like it was a pretty bad one, from the way she looked. Because of the sun... so maybe Angรฉlique's eyes were a bit more sensitive. Knowing that it would still be a few more minutes before she could use her power again, Sophia eyed Angรฉlique for a while longer. She looked the Aberration over from top to bottom slowly, taking in her clothes, posture, skin color... which wasn't particularly healthy.
She opened her mouth, hardened her voice slightly to try and get rid of that shaky feeling, and tilted her head to one side before speaking. "You look like you're going to faint." Hah. She would know, wouldn't she?
Angel grimaced in response to Sophia. Was it really that obvious she was struggling to stay awake? The raven-haired Aberration mentally cursed, letting silence settle in for a small moment before breaking it with a forced smile and straightened sitting posture.
"I suppose I could use a little nap. Didn't sleep much tonight with the party going and all." Angรฉlique let out another nervous giggle, knowing well that excuse wasn't convincing at all, but she didn't want Sophia to worry about fainting while they were trying to help. "I got no time to be sleeping around though. You and I have the means to help now. Let's finish evacuating this place so we can help the others fight those monsters."
Unbeknownst to the blind Mage, there was no longer sight of giant creatures looming over the towering buildings of Washington, only a few large debris floating on their way towards the evacuation area.
Sophia decided to just leave it, for there was nothing she could really do even if Angรฉlique was about to faint. "Right..." The party though, that seemed like it had happened so long ago. Had it really been last night that all the buildings had still been standing? That she attended the party only to end up not talking to anyone but Lily?
And the monsters. She hadn't entirely forgotten, no. There had been that sense of fear and urgency all the while she had been working, but now that Angรฉlique mentioned them, Sophia remembered full force how soon the monsters could possible reach them. She hadn't felt the trembling from the ice monster for a while though... lifting her gaze to scan what destruction she could see from where she was, she frowned. None of them were in sight, when it should have been easy enough to spot at least the ice creature.
Twisting around to look behind her, her eyes widened at the sight of the chunks of debris floating in the distance. How did I miss that? She thought she could make out something large lying on top of one of the pieces, but she couldn't be sure. The pieces didn't seem to be heading towards them nor did they seem particularly threatening, which was good, but she turned to Angรฉlique anyway. "I should be able to use my power anytime, but... there's also, uh, stuff in the sky?"
Angรฉliqueโs face shifted to something more serious when Sophia mentioned flying stuff towards them. Was that a new threat heading their way? As much as it displeased the singing Mage, she could not turn a blind eye to this new element. Her shielding hand moved up to her forehead, positioning itself much like one saluting their superior as Angel opened her eyes. Immediately, a surge of pain shot into her visual organs as their sensory nerves overloaded from the bright sunlight after being accustomed to the darkness. Angelโs face flinched, wincing in pain but she kept trying to spot what Sophia was talking about.
Flying debris of buildings. It seemed to have come from the place where the monsters were fighting before. Angel wasnโt sure what to make of this. The monsters werenโt there anymore, but no one from over there; Zoe, Allison, Brent, Ernest, Sander, Hazel nor Callan made contact and said the monsters were dealt with. This whole new situation surged a hint of anxiety into the fallen rockstar. What happened to the others?
โWhatever the f-โฆ hell that is, letโs hope itโs on our side. We donโt have anyone to deal with sky rock throwers here.โ She hissed through clenched teeth, her pain obvious in her eyes as they leaked tears from being subjected to this much light. Angel then remembered, on the morning news after the boysโ bar incident, that Kadabra had manifested himself to save the guys from being shot at. Maybe it was him floating in the sky? โPerhaps itโs Kadabra. Apparently he is in DC today.โ Angรฉlique suggested optimistically to Sophia, her eyes now shutting themselves and her hand returning over them while her other free hand wiping the tears from her cheeks.
Shifting her gaze back to the floating debris as Angรฉlique spoke, Sophia nodded in agreement even though she knew the Aberration wasn't watching her. Hearing the way the girl next to her spoke though, she tore her gaze from the spectacle to look at Angรฉlique. Let's say that she has extremely sensitive eyes, she thought. Just looking up into the sky hurts her eyes?
The fact that Kadabra was in DC was new to her, for she hadn't read any news earlier this morning or the previous night. She accepted it as a possible reason, and really hoping that it was Kadabra, nodded again. Then shifting her focus from the debris to thinking about the people she had yet to spot in the rubble, she cast an eye around the bleak area. She was about to tell Angรฉlique that she was ready to start again, but when she looked at her for a second time, she decided on something different. "An...Angรฉlique. I can tell Grant directly? If you'd like to keep your eyes closed? You don't..."
โNo, donโt! Angel interrupted Sophiaโs suggestion, not willing to hear any more of it. Whether it was because she didnโt want Sophia to be walking around in her condition or because she feared to be useless one more time, Angรฉlique remained firm in helping Sophia, even if it meant causing herself more trouble to her sight. But if pain was the cost for helping not only the others more quickly, but to also save some lives and atone if only a bit for what she did earlier and even back to Montrรฉal, then she was willing to carry that cross.
โDonโt worry about me, itโs just looking where you point and telling Grant to get his a-โฆ butt over there and dig them out. Nothing too painful. Itโs better than forcing you to stand and walk around in your condition.โ The shades-less young woman tried to reassure the Arbiter girl, although her migraine was steadily becoming worse.
Sophia was surprised and perhaps a bit hurt at the speed at which Angรฉlique rejected her suggestion. She's one of the proud type who need to be seen as top contributors to whatever is going on. Jaw clenching slightly, she gazed at the Aberration through slightly narrowed eyes. "Well, what about your con--"
Suddenly, Sophia broke off. A curious part of her wondered how long it would take to convince Angรฉlique to back down if she tried, but in the end she pushed that thought away despite how much she wanted to find out. There wasn't enough time. This wasn't the place.
Whatever. It occurred to Sophia that she could just walk over by herself and Angรฉlique would not be able to stop her, but strangely she decided against it. If Angรฉlique wanted to work until she passed out, Sophia wouldn't stop her. Still, she made a mental note to keep a careful eye on the girl. "Fine." She switched on her power. "But don't blame me when you regret it later. Or pass out." A pause as she scanned her surroundings again. "Tell me if you change your mind."
โIโll worry about passing out when I actually pass out, if it ever happens, donโt sweat it.โ Angel replied with a hint of frustration.
God, that kid sure was persistent. She didnโt know if she was more annoyed by the attitude or was admiring the tenacity. A strong and defiant soul unwilling to be trampled. Thinking about it, Sophia sounded like a quieter version of the singer's younger self. They somewhat shared this trait of personality, Angรฉlique figured. A faint smile creeped up on her face at this realization, softening her hardened features.
โReady when you are.โ Angel finally added, shielding her eyes upwards once more and slowly opening them. For now, her eyes would squint at Sophiaโs direction to minimize the light input until a clear direction was given.
With her power on, Sophia wasn't able to see Angรฉlique's smile, or else she might have wondered about it. Instead, she carefully began looking again for survivors. There were so many people who were not moving, probably outnumbering those that were actually conscious. Soon settling on one that possibly was alive, she raised an arm to point at another heap. It was obvious that Sophia had been trying her best to be as accurate as possible with her directions, though she rarely added any words unless the place was really hard to judge.
"This one's buried much farther down? So... you might want to tell..." She trailed off, assuming that Angรฉlique understood what she meant. Might want to tell Grant that it isn't the wrong place, he'll just have to dig more.
As soon as Sophia raised her arm, Angelโs eyes fully opened to precisely know where the girl was pointing at. She flinched from the pain surging into her eyes, but she nonetheless tried to not let it overcome her senses as she acknowledged the Arbiterโs directions. Soon enough, Angรฉlique let the flood of magical warmth take over her throat as she focused on one of her classmates, her whispering displaced from her lips to Grant's ears.
โGrantโฆ Sophia managed to locate more potential survivors. They are buried deeper this time, so it might take more time to find them. Iโll have a voice marking you the location of the survivors.โ
Shortly after her call, the ghostly-voiced Aberration projected her words over the location Sophia was pointing. Yells of a familiar voice shouting โOver here!โ and โHelp!โ would serve as good enough guides for Grant and other available diggers to find those trapped people.
Angel soon found herself stumbling on the debris she was sitting on as her mind blacked out for a second. Her sluggish reflexes barely managed to catch herself onto another chunk of debris to steady herself and prevent her from falling down her seating place. Mental exhaustion quickly began to manifest itself once more as the Aberration abused of her abilities. Uneven breaths made it clearer she fighting a losing battle against fatigue.
Meanwhile, Grant was finishing up on digging out the person that Angel had pointed out to him. The task of crumbling the debris proved to be not too tiring, but it didn't leave him fatigue-free. Just as he thought that he was going to go back to doing nothing, a familiar misplaced voice sounded beside him to inform about several other buried survivors. So much for doing nothing.
Finishing up on his current dig, he continued onto the next, following the shouting voice. On his way, he slowed down his pace when he noticed Angel's stumble from what seemed to be a bout of fatigue. Conflict clashed in his mind, but ultimately, he said nothing and decided to continue on to his destination to dig out the survivors.
Eventually, things would seem to have settled down for the evacuation effort, or at least the whole ordeal seemed to have winded down to something more tolerable. Siena returned to the semi after managing to calm down, despite still being troubled by the whole situation. Marcus was quick to join her as he returned to his driver's seat, waiting for the others to be done with their tasks to drive them back to the evacuation point. Kusari brought Lilianna back to the truck's cargo hold and stood there in watch to prevent Regulars from entering the truck and grab at the Healer again, while Emma followed and stood there in case Lily needed to transfer injuries to Determination.
Meanwhile, the tired excavating trio of Angรฉlique, Sophia and Grant kept going on their side of the devastated site. For as long as they could, the small team continued working the system they have made: Sophia would spot the survivors, Angel would guide Grant to the location of the trapped people, then Grant would use his chains to dig out the survivors,
It was evident, after a while, that exhaustion hung heavily in the air, both for the Regulars who kept on fighting against this monster that was the ruined condo to dig out their beloved ones and the Subnaturals who went through a stressful ordeal and used their power probably as much as never before.
After a while, the loud rumbling of a USARILN-marked vehicle heralded the arrival of a large squad. Rifles were pointed and orders were barked at the desperate civilians who were still swarming around the semi, asking incessantly about their healing needs now that they need there was a healer being held away from them. Again, the fear of actual firearms pointed in their face seemed to be far more effective than a handful of teenagers with white marks and Xโs as the Regulars backed away from the truck, quickly following the soldiersโ directives.
The Subnaturals who were visibly able to walk were quickly brought back to the military vehicles at gunpoint, letting none of the kids have any leeway after hearing what had happened not too far away from this position. For those unable to walk, stretchers were prepared ahead of time as two guards were swiftly dispatched for each incapacitated guard and Subnatural, bringing them along their peers to the trucks.
Once everyone was inside the USARILN convoy, it quickly left the scene and headed to the evacuation point, much to the laments of the Regulars who were left to themselves with a promise of the militaryโs immediate action to their pleas.
Overhead, floating debris carrying Kadabra and the rest of the students that remained behind to fight were just about to reach the evacuation point. Everyone will soon be reunited after this disastrous attack.
Most of the students were already back at the temporary camp; Kadabra dropped some of them off earlier to the gasps and relief of the normal survivors as a building lowered itself gently to the ground nearby and several more shaken civilians stumbled out. The APC brought the rest just a few minutes prior, and the unconscious blood mage was carried in last after soldiers found him collapsed en route to the evacuation point, a trail of demolished buildings and shredded concrete behind him. As soon as the students were collected, their injuries were also healed with syringes of magical blood. For those who were there before, namely Callan and Hazel, their wounds had already been treated with Christmasโ blood. Both were currently resting in one of the tents nearby. The healer in question was in another tent, still hooked up to IV drips and blood bags, his power put to good use.
However, the students had only minutes to recover. Soon enough, they were given orders to move and guards were herding them onto an APC, not unlike their first day at USARLN East. The unconscious ones were simply strapped to their seats, and any attempt at asking for clarification was met with silent glares and grunts. The urgency of their situation was palpable, but went unsaid. Christmas, however, remained behind. His power was simply too integral to salvaging the bloody aftermath of DC.
Director Zhang watched passively as the last of the soldiers left in the second APC, escorting Unit B to one of her personal safehouses in the southeastern seaboard of North Carolina. Now that the students had done their part, she needed to be able to do hers. And that meant keeping them out of sight and out of mind. Surely, once the survivors regrouped and the situation in DC was stabilized, rumors, testimonies and survivorsโ stories would definitely begin to circulate. Then the media would dive for them like hungry hawks. She was confident that she could handle all this. But she needed an early head start, and what was better than coordinating the relief efforts here, with a powerful healer at her disposal. Then she would work on their publicity. Opinions of the masses were easy enough to sway, with just the release of selected footage. Claims of injuries and violence would be harder to verify, especially when the wounds were healed by magical means. As for those who were more persistent with their accusations, she could just blame it on the desire for compensation.
It might seem cruel, to twist their words and minds in such a way, but every miracle required sacrifices. And looking around, this world could really use a miracle or two.
The Director retreated from the forefront of attention once the students had been taken away, letting the chaos of the aftermath swallow up everyone elseโs attention completely. She pulled out a separate, secured phone not connected to military systems and scrolled through the list of contacts, each name encrypted into gibberish and memorized long ago.
Not all sacrifices were bloodless, and there was only a small window for the actions she wanted to pursue. Her finger paused, the nonsense list of names barely visible on the screen in the bright day. A hand covered her eyes as if shielding them from the light. She stood still a second longer then lowered her hand, tapping swiftly a contact from the list.
The phone rang only once before Morph picked up.
โDirector.โ The girlโs soft voice betrayed no surprise, though there was the sound like a utensil clinking against a bowl or dish on the other end.
โHow are you?โ
โAvailable.โ A light rustling followed the sound of a chair being pushed back.
โThatโs good. Thereโs an emergency in Washington. I assume youโre nearby.โ
โIโll be there within two hours.โ
โDetails when you arrive. Remember to bring your phone.โ
The trucks drove for over seven hours with minimal rest, stopping only briefly at gas stations for quick refuels and a large helping of the snacks in the store, moving them southward along the I-95 S. Cities and towns gave way to large, open stretches of lonely road punctuated by the occasional town and smaller city that passed them by outside the windows. Everywhere they went, there were soldiers and militia roaming and several times a smaller town would have the nerve to stop the procession of trucks for questions before the matter was quickly cleared up by the sight of the cuffed students.
As they continued further south, their route moved into lusher farmlands heavily fortified with fencing, light walls, and soldiers on the perimeter. Signs of battles and losses against Dreamcatcherโs monsters lined the gouges and decimated earth along several miles of fortifications. The soldiers were tense, moving through territory that had seen its fair share of battles, but there was no hesitationโthey had jobs to do, even if the world wanted to fall apart around them. Most were there to keep subnaturals in check through the Institutesโ employ, but several knew there was little else they could do to make a difference. Time had proven, more than anything else, that magic was an absolute necessity now to fight back.
By the time they reached the southern end of North Carolina, the soldiers were just as eager to rest, though they didnโt reveal it as easily. The tiny town held little by way of interest for most people, and many of its residents had relocated to safer locales in the last several years, leaving behind unclaimed homes and businesses that had fallen into disrepair. Those who stayed were the old and the uncertain and the paltry militia had neither the means nor the training to fend off any serious attacks. But for all that seemed impractical about the location, there was a elegance to the areaโsweeping rows of farmland, some overgrown where the owners had left and others still well-maintained despite the lack of protection, a clear, glistening river mere miles from the main town of Southport, and a soft, balmy temperature that was cooling down significantly as the seasons shifted slowly towards the end of autumn. Dogwood trees were bare of their characteristic spring blooms, but the warm shades of autumn lingered in the browns, reds, and oranges of the fallen leaves. Across the river lay a thick forest that had once been a carefully observed national reserve, but had by now been abandoned for more pressing matters. There, too, the vegetation was aging with fall and a stubbornly functioning lighthouse illuminated the night with flashes of brown and old green.
The students were shoved onto a short ferry ride towards Bald Head Island, with unconscious students or heavy sleepers carried on stretchers onto a ferry that, despite the look of the worn down town, was still crisply maintained, its red paint and polish recently buffed to a bright sheen. Water and the smell of the ocean buffeted the boat for some time, but around an hour later they had arrived at the island, stepping off the pier and onto the smooth sand of the beach. Instead of the usual pier the ferry docked at for the journey, this pier was an unmarked location several miles north of the main village on the island and well into the territory of the islandโs previous natural reserve left unchecked and untouched since the Slumber.
South of their location, at the usual ferry route, lay a small village of little more than 80 or so residents, the broken down housing either patched up by obviously amateur work or in complete dilapidation. But electricity flowed there, as did running water, and the people lived as comfortably as they could manage. Supplies seemed low, since the remaining convenience store in town had shelves half empty or half spoiled, but people came and went all the same, the only notable oddity being that they brought in items and came out with entirely different items.
Further down the short road was a gas station that pumped no gas, but still refilled cars just as well. A mystery, really, and for some strange reason the majority of people felt a natural aversion to the location, as if they simply didnโt want to go there. It suited the purposes of the inhabitants just fine and instead of living in designated homes, most people preferred to stay in the large motel at the village center, living apparently for free while those who preferred their own forms of privacy took up abandoned houses around town. A single tavernโit would be a stretch to call it a proper barโwas the sole source of guilty pleasure entertainment around the place, since the movie theater was entirely nonfunctional and no one had found the motivation to repair the projector in every theater room.
It would take someone braver than usual to figure out that the townโs inhabitants were all subnaturals.
The commanding officer of their group checked his phone once more, then led them past the lapping waves and into the underbrush, every soldier flicking their mounted flashlights on immediately as the darkness of the forest swallowed the group.
There was an animal trail to follow, and the sounds of rustling terrestrial creatures and disturbed birds permeated the crunching of leaves and twigs beneath their feet. The trek, luckily, did not last too long. Just thirty minutes later moonlight broke through the leaves as they entered a vast clearing of land that looked to be an old estate. In the distance, a large three-story house built in the old colonial style with creaking wooden porches and ornate columns sat alone among the swaying grass and meadow saffrons that dotted the field, lights bright inside its many windows and carefully carved doorways.
A cobblestone path led the way to the front steps of the porch and several maids and butlers stepped out from behind the grand double oak doors, bowing politely to the students. The maids all sported the same outfit of ruffled white lace over a black, knee-length dress and each had their hair neatly tied into a doughnut bun. The men wore a similar uniform in tailored, double-breasted suits and slicked hair swept back over their heads.
The soldiers seemed uneasy on approach and once closer there was an obvious reason why: every staff member of the house was a subnaturalโall were white marks and hardly older than the students save for a much older, unmarked man who appeared to be in his late forties with a trim, graying beard and a sharp glare to his natural countenance. He approached the group, nodding once to the commanding officer before regarding the sorry states of the students.
โThe Director will house everyone in her private estate for now,โ he announced, voice deep and clear despite the signs of his age. โMy staff will show you to your rooms. Anyone incapable of moving will be brought to the infirmary in the back of the mansion.โ He turned to the soldiers then, regarding them coolly. โThere are also quarters to accommodate your men, Officer. I imagine youโll be stationed on the island perimeter at this rate?โ
โAffirmative. Weโll leave them with you,โ the soldier replied, glancing once more at the students before signaling his men to stand down. Weapons and shoulders relaxed and a maid gestured for the military units to follow her while others rushed to take the stretchers from several soldiers.
โFollow the maids to your rooms, please,โ the older man spoke again, looking towards the students. As he talked, the maids were already surrounding the students, herding the uninjured into the buildingโs vestibule and down the west wing of the mansion towards a set of stairs that led to the second floor hallway and a series of similar rooms, ten on each side, with a plaque boldly announcing the intended occupantโs name on every door. The only exception to the group was, once again, Hazel who remained surrounded by four guards on each end of her stretcher. Two carried her into her designated room and remained on alert in case she attempted any sudden moves upon waking, weapons at the ready. Two more stood guard outside the door.
Each room contained sets of nondescript, white pajamas for the students in their size and a small armoire of clothes that had apparently come from their dorm rooms at the Institute. A folded set of swimwear lay in the back of the bottom drawer and gentle lighting from the rectangular wall scones revealed that there was electricity in the place despite its remote location. The walls were decorated in striped pastels of cream and white while a mahogany, canopied bed accented the cozy room with a matching sofa and coffee table against the far wall. There was a pastoral charm to the gold ivy and vine filigree that trimmed the edges of the bed and nightstand, and the old-fashioned style of adding entablatures and pediments to the tops of doorways was displayed in its finest here as every entrance looked hand-carved in uniform floral designs. A silver chain hung beside each bed, within reaching distanceโa bell mechanism that would ring for a maid at the occupantโs convenience.
โFor any inconvenience, please summon a staff member with the silver chain beside your beds. You are free to select your own rooms, but bear in mind we added your clothes according to the name plaques on the doors.โ
With another bow, the brown-haired girl left, followed by the majority of the maid. An older-looking blonde remained and gave them several more reminders.
โThe baths are in the east wing, accessible from the hallway at the far end. Food has been prepared in the dining hall on the first floor. From the foyer, please head straight towards the double doors in the back to find the dining area. Youโre free to move about as you like while here, including forays to the beach, but please do not leave the island or move beyond the perimeter. Guards will open fire without question if you choose to and we will also be obligated to stop you if we believe you are attempting to escape.โ
With a kind smile, she curtsied and left as well.
The estate's distant location from proper centers of civilization meant there was little by way of cell signal. Calls in the area often dropped or refused to patch through. As if to ease the burden of communication, internet was available in the estate and there were studies bordering a library on the third floor with computers for open use. A small gallery nested in a corner on the third floor, connected to the library by a short hallway. Various paintings by foreign artists were compiled in the private collection and covered a range of styles from classical to abstract to contemporary.
A large billiard room sat on the second floor, east wing, containing a TV, several sofas, the customary billiard table, several small two-seater tables, and a wine rack on the wall. Connected to the billiard room by another set of doors was a small gym with basic exercise equipment. These particular rooms laid along the same hallway as the bathrooms containing both a large bathtub and a separate shower stall. Along the walls of the bathroom were long, wooden shelves filled with folded, soft towels and expensive soaps and shampoos, freshly purchased for the recent occupants.
On the first floor, to either side of the main foyer (before arriving at the back doors that entered the dining hall) were two sitting rooms with recliners and massage tables. Here, too, were silver chains to be pulled for summoning staff. A small music room beside the west sitting room on the first floor housed a piano, two cellos, a violin, and several stands with flutes and clarinets. Behind the main dining room were the kitchens, which also bordered the infirmary even further behind that, positioning the food preparation place in between the two rooms that would need it most. Private chambers for the servants were attached to the side of the mansion and a particular private chamber took up the entire attic space.
Below the mansion laid a wine cellar, a larder, a pantry, and various storage rooms filled with crates of miscellaneous tools, decor items, and nonperishable foods. Towards the back of the underground hallways were cleaning rooms equipped with various detergents, softeners, and dry-cleaning chemicals for laundry purposes. An easy stairwell allowed access to the open grounds above the laundry rooms via a trapdoor where certain larger items such as delicate down comforters and long tablecloths hung on a clothesline, fluttering gently in the night air.
Outside, a large garage connected loosely to the back of the mansion and contained several white bicycles of varying heights and two gleaming cars, the models several years old by now, but still very clearly black Dodge Charger Hellcats, a model known for its unnecessary acceleration and horsepower.
Behind the mansion was an outdoor pool with floor lighting accompanied by a pool house and a large greenhouse where various vegetation were grown for both visual enjoyment and for practical, kitchen purposes. A short distance away, asphalt had been laid down for a tennis court and a basketball court, the required supplies for each sport resting in sheds nearby. A quarter of a mile from the mansion's backend accommodations was a shooting range and another shed filled with various hunting equipment from crossbows to rifles to skinning knives, all impeccably maintained and cleaned alongside a large table, though the cloying, gamey smell in the air revealed the shed had seen plenty of use recently.
Further away were the stables, home to three horses (a black Thoroughbred, a white Andalusian, and a brown-white tobiano-patterned Pintabian), the entire structure completed with a large tack room filled with saddles, bridles, and grooming equipment, along with the feed.
The entirety of the estate, despite the rustic appeal of its decor, revealed a careful attention to maintenance and cleaning, marrying the old-fashioned style with a modern cleanliness that made banister railings and mirrors sparkle immaculately.
In the midst of it all, the various questions surrounding the location and its staff were easy to forget--for the moment.
As the class undertook their quiet retreat the world kept moving, processing the annihilation of the United Statesโ most secure citadel. Yet in the midst of this widespread apprehension, USARILN Eastโs unnamed unit of subnatural teens took the spotlight once more, acquiring a cult following that only blew to immeasurable proportions as the days passed. Public debate ignited with a previously unseen fervor, heated discussion covering the question of whether or not these recent public appearances would put these subnaturals in a whole new light. The media was lit ablaze.
The catalyst was a series of videos of unknown origin. โLeakedโ footage from the perspectives of the teenagers that had so bravely battled the odds to be the heroes the city needed.
The voice of Proteus sharply giving orders to his squad, culminating in the defeat of the crusher and the slime creature in an impressive collaboration with Kadabra. A girl with an ethereal sword. A long-haired boy flinging re-purposed pipes at the slime. A brown-haired girl in chainmail crushing the ice giant to pieces with monstrous, astral limbs. The girl previously identified as โSiena Santanaโ diving through solid concrete in her rescue efforts. Time Scar receiving tearful thanks from a dust-covered civilian. Emma from the news getting thrown to her side, only to continue digging with a grim resolution moments later. Angelique Lachance and a small girl with shining eyes working together to locate trapped victims, with ethereal chains moving to the sites as they were pointed out. A recording of the underbelly of a colossal reptilian beast as it tore through cars and charged towards the slime monster. A blonde girl with a pregnant woman, healing individuals in a crowd with a black thread. A censored shot of a pale, lanky boy with wisps of red smoke rising from his naked body leaning down to pick up an aquamarine-haired girl while holding another bleeding girl over one shoulder. A short segment of footage from a third-person perspective, filmed with a steady hand, showcased an unconscious subnatural boy attached to multiple bags of blood along one arm while paramedics withdrew blood from both his other arm and a leg, injecting the healing liquid rapidly into the nearby gurneys of severely injured people.
It didnโt take the netizens much critical thinking to deduce the nature of the shaky footage. Skewed, low angle shots and nondescript watermarks such as the โB-15 42782 Roless, B.โ in the footage featuring Proteusโ team were consistent features throughout all the videos. Someone had obviously broken into USARILNโs impenetrable database and released recordings of the battle from the studentsโ ankle cuffs. But if slander had been their intention then the leaker had fallen short. From the selective clips released online, it was incredibly difficult finding anything malicious around the courage and goodwill displayed by the teenagers. If more footage could be found then perhaps a more critical view could be taken towards the subnaturals but alas, there was nothing.
Strangely enough, out of all the leaks only the footage from a โB-02 15263 Bloodworth, K.โ had been missing its audio. The issue was passed over easily though. Never in this decade of terror had there been such a treasure trove of raw, in-depth subnatural footage available to the public aside from the carefully curated footage of the Precursorsโ battle with Garrote that had been heavily edited for public disclosure and the usually unclear news broadcasts of random subnatural attacks. Not many people bothered to look a gift horse in the mouth. Rumors of a murderous riot in the middle of the disaster had been similarly passed over, or erased before anyone could check back on them.
Of course with the public knowledge of these new subnaturals and their abilities, the online forums went hard to work, compiling background research and theories to cover these new figures. Emma Halwell had already been christened with โPandoraโ, a tongue-in-cheek reference to the saccharine image she had displayed in her talk with Darren Lingard. The juxtaposition of the sweet girl and the dark, shadowy figures she unleashed with their myriad talents were enough for several astute viewers to coin her the name of the Greek myth Pandoraโthe โall-gifting,โ the woman who released evil into the world, but held hope close to her bosom, sealed tight within the jar. It was as close as the public would come for now to admitting that they needed subnaturalsโthat the monstrous plague upon the world could be solved by the very same powers that brought them to being guided by the subnaturals that people had yet to accept.
The unhinged redhead from the WJLA interview hadnโt gone without her own brand of bad publicity either, proving herself as the prime evidence that the worldโs governments were more than correct in their legislations against the magical youths. Czernobog was the name given to Zoe. โBlack Godโ, the Slavic personification of evil and bad luck. Even in the dim night light, the black mist and tattoos brought forth by the X-markโs power had been visible and described in close detail in the testimonial Barbra Tyson had delivered after the interview. It was more than enough to condemn almost all the Washington subnaturals.
And yet Barbraโs smear campaign had been easily overshadowed by the tragedy that had befallen the capital.
The internet was abuzz instead with the fervor of naming their new subnaturals that had been revealed to the public. Whether they would see more of them in the future didnโt worry most people and arguments over names set the web on fire. But the majority always seemed to win out in the end and Siena was named Sylph for the way she seemed to move like air through the material of the building. Hazelโs name flipped between Marionette and Puppeteer for several hours, but by the end of the various discussions on Redditโs r/subnaturals โMarionetteโ had finally won out as the popular choice. The dragon that had attempted to take on the slime was given a large pool of names to draw from, but the final call was Kilgharrah after the Arthurian dragon of the same name who, in some renditions, allied with Merlin andโby internet logicโhumans. Sophia took Seer by a landslide, with some wondering if she might have a similar power to Foresight, but relegated to viewing only the present time. Black threads that seemed to move wounds from one source to another gave Lily the name of Norn, the name for beings that controlled manโs fate and often visually depicted with threads. Angelโs display of power netted her the name of Siren, though with less reference to the mythological temptresses and more to the effects of a police or ambulance siren; something that draws the ear. Large amounts of interest cropped up for Grant, whose matter manipulation and control gave way to much speculation about his capabilities. One of the end results was his nicknameโGleipnirโthe impossible chain that could bind a monster.
The most impressive of the clips, however, was the girl whose immaterial sword seemed to destroy the slime on contact as she reached out towards a raging surge of the dense liquid mass. A sword to fight the monsters. Multiple jokes about the โInfinity +1โ sword were thrown around, but the end name for her was Excalibur, drawing again from famous Arthurian legends that, if the theory of Dreamcatcherโs existence was to be believed, might not have been legends at all.
Meanwhile the long-haired mage firing projectiles at the slime near Excaliburโs position was, for most people, somewhat unimpressive given the scale of what Kadabra could do, but people were fascinated all the same, wondering how the details of the power worked and noting the drawn line. Gregory was named Ballista, though Rifle was also a close contender. Once laughter and derision over the naked student had died down, his speed and red smoke earned him the name Ifrit, though the nickname was less of a focus while people tried and failed to uncensor the footage just to appease the question of whether this particularly tall guy had genitals to match.
As talk surged about a new team of superheroes to replace the Precursors (with equal amounts of scoffing and scorn on the opposition), the Director remained in the thick of it, manipulating information through rumors and hearsay and spreading the leaked clips on various accounts bounced through proxies and foreign locations, looking as if there had been a data breach. A particular rumor that she did not spread, however, was that a mage whose power involved technology and networking had been at the root of the data breach. It seemed silly and far too convenient for her to spread the thought, but the minds of the internet had come up with a story for her, so she pretended to field the DODโs questions with the answer that she was currently investigating the leak, but of course all checks came up clean and the world held too many possibilities for even the craftiest to consider everything. It occurred to very few (and even they dismissed the thought) that the Director could be lying. She seemed too austere to be the sort. Too severe. Too heartless to help the subnaturals that way.
Her private estate, however, told a different story.
You'll have a little over two weeks IC for this interaction period (until 0500, 7 October 2020 IC) on the island and the same amount of time OOC to sort things out. I will delay any deadlines for this case should the need arise since it's a much longer interaction period than the usual several days to a week that we've been used to, but I have been planning to increase your interaction period durations for a while now, especially once people have certain routines set down for their character so we'll need to cover less minute details.
The location is several miles north of the main island village, as mentioned, and it's in a similar state of neglect as Southport, though people still certainly live there. For anyone who wants to venture that far, most people on the island are subnaturals, so ping a GM if you head into town. All basic conveniences are there such as a grocery store, hardware store, etc., but before any interactions, poke a GM since everything's a little strange, like previously mentioned.
Callan will be depressed and sulking in her room for much of this period.
Christmas will not show up for the first four days of the duration here. He'll be there on day 5 (24th IC) along with the dog for Siena, the birbo for Angel, and the cat for Sophia.
On the second day, several soldiers will arrive with a cooler of blood for Sander (21st IC).
On the third day (22nd IC), a group of soldiers will arrive at the estate with any items salvaged from the hotel in Washington. It'll be in a large box in the foyer and will be brought in around 4 AM. Since the penthouse was somewhat intact still, they were able to recover much of what was left behind.
Clothing from DC shopping trips.
Stuff from Siena and pals' shopping spree.
Swimsuits for Emma and Allison.
Christmas's ribbons.
Wisford equipment forgotten in rooms during D.C attack. But all wishalloy have been taken back.
Thatโs what she wanted more than anything. To go back. To be done. It was too dangerous for them out here, theyโd barely survived Wisford and theyโd barely survived DC. Well, some of them did. She didnโt feel like she did. But at least theyโd get to go back, back to the relative safety of the school. At least, thatโs what she thought until it became evident that they werenโt. Her heart sank, the sense of impending doom within her growing. What could possibly happen next? The ever-present question still rested on her mind: Who was going to die? Marcus? Callan? Hazel? Herself?
She knew who sheโd pick.
Emma filled up the journey with a combination of sulking and texting back and forth with Riley. Riley, after all this time it was still Riley. It hurt to think about- the promises they made, how things ended, and the fact that they still couldnโt let each other go. As for the others, well, Emma proved aloof during the ride over. She maintained her usual politeness, talked if they wanted to talk, but it was clear sheโd rather be left alone for the moment.
When they arrived at the mansion Emma had little reaction to their surroundings. It seemed like another place for them to die in. She was ready to sleep, if sleep would come for her, although she doubted it would. After half listening to the butlerโs spiel she readily followed the maids, heading to her room as soon as they were done talking, favoring the rest of the group with a weary nod.
She was quick the lock the door behind her. Finally, she was alone. She thought that she wanted to cry, but now the feeling wouldnโt come. Instead, she just stood there for a long moment. Maybe she was trying to cry. She found that it helped, but it wouldnโt now.
Instead she just waited for something to happen, but of course nothing did.
The form of Determination grew before her.
โYouโre still here, huh?โ
She started at him. But of course, the creature gave no reaction. She reached out tentatively, softly laying her hand on the creatureโs chest. It was cold and smooth, distinctly unhuman.
โWeโre so weak, arenโt we? Well, I guess thatโs my fault.โ
She felt a little silly talking to something that she knew wouldnโt talk back.
โCanโฆ can youโฆโ
Emma hesitated. How sad was this?
โCan you hold me?โ
The creature extended its arms, wrapping them around her. She felt the tears rolling down her cheeks, or maybe it was a tear, she wasnโt quite sure. Determinationโs embrace felt wrong, lifeless. She wanted warmth. Butโฆ this was all she had, wasnโt it? Or maybe it wasnโt. She didnโt fucking know.
Another long moment passed.
And then, suddenly, she was back on the cliff. The water stretched before her, waves crashing against the rock wall far below, suddenly morphing into the field of stars. It was the same vision as before this time, with the same drip of power.
And suddenly she was back just as quickly as it begun. She pulled away from Determination, looking the creature up and down. โWhat's changed nowโฆ?โ she said idly to herself.
It started before she realized what was happening. For a moment the creature shuttered, before doubling over as if it was in great pain. It took her a second, but she realized that Determination was doing something sheโd never seen it do before. A split was appearing in its previously blank face, as if it was always there and now struggling to be opened. It was rightโฆ right where a mouth would be.
Suddenly she became very aware of what was happening and it terrified her.
The words came through the creature's stuck together mouth. โIโฆโ Determinationโs voice was heavy, guttural, rough. It sounded like a monster, and it also sounded like it was in pain. โI donโtโฆโ Emma backed away, tripping over her own feet and landing ass-first on the floor. He wasnโt moving towards, but she was still scared. This was too much.
โI donโtโฆ donโt wantโฆ donโt want to dieโฆโ
And then he was very suddenly gone. Emma didnโt move.
โF-fuck.โ Emma stammered out between hurried breaths. "Fuck, fuck, fuck." came out in quick succession. She looked at the spot where he was standing before. He was still there, she could feel, ready to be called on. But... what did he mean?
What had she done? Of course, Emma didn't end up sleeping that night.
The journey had been uneventful for Zoe, at least compared to what had come before. Seeing the others, the ones who'd left behind such devastation, she'd expected to feel angry. Furious, even. And she did, but she couldn't find the energy to confront them. The energy for anything except silence. Everything had been overridden by a feeling of pure resignation. It hadn't lasted long, but for a moment, just a moment, she'd accepted her failure. Accepted that this had been poisoned like everything else.
That scared her more than any monster. Because there wasn't a way out this time, not like before. Maybe if she'd realised what she was with the others, she could have left before anything was ruined. But she couldn't choose to die, and that was her only option. By the nature of what, of who she was, she did nothing but hurt. Nothing but bring pain.
So here she was, the day after things went to hell, alone in a forest on the estate of the woman who ruled their lives. Surrounded by monsters just like herself, knowing that things were beginning to twist. Knowing that no matter how she tried, how she apologised for her nature, she'd always end up at the middle. A sea of blood. Tainted, a diseased, dying limb whose infection would only spread.
There would be no treatment. There was no saving something that was already so tainted and broken. The others, far behind her in the mansion, couldn't be dragged down to her fate. She glanced at her hand, feeling the weight of the weapon she held. A knife, simple and sturdy, borrowed from the kitchens. Not the kind meant for a warrior, but it would suit her purpose. She'd made the motion many times, and barely flinched as the blade sliced along her knuckles, reopening scars that had long since healed.
"You don't want us to get hurt too, do you? This is for your own good."
A routine of years past, a scared little girl learning to make pain as natural as breathing. People who were supposed to look after her, to love her, stood by as unfeeling as the blade. Strength all she was worth, pain the only truth of life, failures clear in her mind - perhaps to another person, it would have been something they longed to forget.
But what before had been forced upon her could just as easily be used to forge her into something new.
Cut out the rot, bleed away the poison. Tear it all out.
Because she couldn't let herself give up so easily. If what she was would bring that kind of pain, if the rot was spreading, then there was only one option. Her knuckles collided with the bark of the nearest tree, blood spattering across the surface as her hands exploded with pain. Tears sprung to her eyes, but she gritted her teeth and kept going. It hurt, it really hurt, but that agony was what she needed to remake herself.
Her composure, her fear, the pain of what she'd done. She'd let it rule her. She'd let it control her, lost her edge in her panic. She'd been afraid of herself, of losing people, and it had made her weak. She'd panicked. It would be the last time. She would make sure it was the last time.
And as if in response to her renewed strength, she found herself somewhere familiar.
She wondered what this place was. The experience was so surreal, but it didn't feel like something she'd dreamed up on her own. Her dreams were more visceral, more real. Nowhere near as peaceful as this place seemed to be. Peaceful, but with a promise behind it that was anything but. A promise that would let her bring more death, more destruction at a moment's notice.
She wondered how far it'd go. How many more times she'd end up here, how much stronger she would become. She supposed it didn't matter how much thought she gave the idea. It would happen regardless, and all she could do was try to make the power hers.
Things didn't seem to have changed much compared to the last time - the waves still crashed, sparks colliding to and fro with no seeming direction or purpose. A scene that she didn't understand, distances she couldn't quite measure. But it was there, and it was real, and that was enough. To know they were there. Around her. Somewhere. Even if it was uncertain, well... everything always was.
She never knew what any of this meant, and maybe she never would. But one thing was clear, and one thing was understood, as the silk thread reached down to touch her protected existence at the centre of it all. Another sparkling, tainted drop of power to give her the strength she needed. It would make her stronger. So she took it gladly. It didn't scare her.
I know what I have to do.
Whatever she may have been, whatever lay in store for her, Zoe was certain of one thing. Until she finally lay down, until the darkness took her like she'd been longing for it to do, she wouldn't let herself do this again. If she were destined to be a monster, a murderer named for a harbinger of death and darkness, then she'd be one of her own making.
As pain lanced down her arm, she could do nothing but smile. At the faces of all the people she'd hurt, at the murderous power that only grew, the inevitable death and destruction that loomed on the horizon. The fact that she always seemed to make it out alive, no matter how she tried to get herself killed. So many wrongs she'd done, so many people hurt that she'd promised to protect. So many failures, so many betrayals. So many times hurting the ones she cared for.
Never again.
Defiant. Determined. Zoe wouldn't lie down and watch herself repeat the same mistakes, not like before. The pain she felt was familiar, the blood that spattered across the surface of the bark a reminder of days long past. She'd been remade once, broken once, but she was broken already. There were things that couldn't be fixed, lines that couldn't be uncrossed. But until the day she could finally end it, finally be cut out and save them all the trouble... she'd remake herself as best she could.
So Zoe would smile as she faced the future, the master of her own fate.
A field of grass extends for miles around, with only a few boulders here and there on the gentle hills around.
A dirt path cuts it way through, a path seldom used from the weeds starting to grow in it. A brown haired girl runs around the weaving path, humming as she did so, wearing a bright white sundress and a straw hat. There was none but the sound of the girl humming as well as the gentle breeze moving the grass.
So why was it that she felt heavy and lethargic?
She moved towards the girl, trying to follow in her path, but the grass seemed to grow faster behind that girl, covering the path in grass as thick as the rest of the sward. It stuck to her, impeding her every step, leaving her further and further behind.
"Hey, _________?"
That girl turned back, peering over her direction.
Without thinking, she extended her hand, realizing too late the black chitinous material covering it. The girl crumbled to dust before her, as did a vast swathe of grass in front of her.
***
Hazel woke up with a jolt, staring at an unfamiliar ceiling. Her first instinct was to drop the two guards there, seeing as they were too close to react quickly if she just moved now. Having recognized their uniform, she simply leaned back in her bed.
She was alive.
That was surprising; she had not a single doubt she would have died once she took off that collar and set out to fight that giant. Her blood had been boiling then, she was certain that even if she took down that giant, she would start destroying everything until she destroyed herself.
Whatever happened there, she did not remember, but it lead to her being alive. Emma would be alive too, since she was going to run. Would her collar still be in her hands? It wasn't bad for now, but she would definitely need the collar and her drugs if she wanted to keep everything away.
Her train of thought was suddenly derailed, her attention captured by a long chain by her bed. It wasn't attached to anything interesting, but the way it hung and where it was placed just begged for her to pull it. Stretching out her hand, she grabbed it firmly, and gave it a firm pull. Tilting her head slightly, she started yanking on the chain rapidly.
After everything that had been done, they were being shoved into a crowded APC yet again. After the luxurious trip in the limo had spoiled his taste for transportation, Marcus was starting to get sick and tired of APCs. Perhaps he was just associating them with everything that had gone wrong so far; Wisford, their very first battle โ hell, an APC was how this little chapter of his life had kicked off, or at least wasnโt very far into the prologue of this one-of-a-kind story. A story that defied genre, but was quickly becoming his own personal horror novel.
The slideshow of sights and quick stops helped to emphasize the length of the journey. The dull purring of the engine threatened to carry him off to another world of nightmares; a trip that he adamantly refused to allow happen. His eyes didnโt dare to shut, nor did he dare to make any lasting eye-contact with any of his classmates, limiting himself to quick glances over their weary and fallen faces.
Yet as Marcus sat there, staring out the window, it seemed like there was one brief moment when fatigue took a hold of him. A brief second as the world funneled from view and he felt his mind drifting off intoโฆ
As Marcus sat there, staring out the window, it seemed like there was one brief moment when fatigue took a hold of him. A brief second as the world funneled from view and he felt his mind drifting off into unconsciousness. As if heโd pass out from either pain or fear as both threatened to swallow him. He was certain he wouldnโt wake up if he did. It would be merciful, but the adrenaline wouldn't allow it.
It promised. He heard the nonexistent voice whisper to him. It always promised. Lies. Truth. Both in the same unheard breath.
The window he stared out of was shattered into a veritable art piece of edges and contours, the frame slightly crushed as glass rattled around the interior. A massive stalagmite peeked through the spot where a gear shift would normally go, it's disappearance promising to severely hamper his escape.
The teeth.
The roof buckled some more as he felt everything shift. The glass in the bottom of the car shifted to the back, the sound like perverse wind-chimes as it clattered across dented metal. It looked at him directly through the cracked windshield, displaying something far more frightening than hunger or malice.
There was Nothing.
The eyes.
That should have been his end. He should have met his end so many different ways. It didn't allow him though, and as things continued in slow motion, he found himself wondering the same question heโd wondered many times: Why?
It didnโt answer. It never did. Or if it did, he was never permitted to remember.
He was accelerating quickly. The spike disappeared through the floor. The glass fell past his face to rest on the ceiling. His good arm grasped for anything as he went weightless, the world tumbling and spinning outside that windshield: the shattered projection screen for his nightmares for over three months now.
โฆsleep.
He jerked upright suddenly, as confusion cemented itself in his brain. Had he fallen asleep? What time was it? The seemingly endless journey of their transport had already done a fine job of keeping him disconnected with time and location. The setting sun was the only indication of how long heโd been asleepโฆbut had it been setting before he drifted off? His brain was confused and cloudy โ desperately trying to piece together information he hadnโt been paying attention to.
He shifted nervously in his seat, trying to alleviate the slight numbness in his legs. For a subnatural whose powers revolved around time, he wasnโt doing a very good job of tracking it.
Something flickered in his mind; like someone saying something he already knew. Something obvious. Something that wasn't worth mentioning.
The smell of saltwater comforted him as he stood on the porch of the estate. This smell was exclusively from better days โ the days when Max and him would pack up all their shit and drive for hours just to spend a day at Wallis. Sure, it had been a fair distance away, but theyโd just sit and talk, and it seemed like time passed by so quickly when they could just relax and chat. Plus, it beat going to Long Island, where everyone and their grandmother would flock to. Trying to get past an old woman drowning in 6 inches of ocean water quickly grated on the nerves.
He found himself sadly reminiscing those days as the moon faintly illuminated the trees, and the comforting smell of the ocean was muted beneath the chemical taint of the chlorinated pool nearby. Did Wallis even exist anymore? Did the brothers still give lessons from their little beach shack up the road?
When he retired to his room for the night, he simply lay in his bed. He didnโt change, and he only had the presence of mind to remove his shoes after a fair amount of time had passed. The back of his arm, unprotected by a sleeve, sent a slight shiver down his body as it met with the cold blanket. It all seemed too cold; unwelcoming even. Lavish places like this had led to nothing but strife in D.C, and he couldnโt help but wonder if there would be a pattern to the madness.
This wasnโt home. Home was a small cul-de-sac on the outskirts of the larger town. It wasnโt a huge estate attended by butlers and maids, all of whom put Marcusโs senses on some kind of unease. Butlers and maids the Marcus had deliberately tried to avoid on his trip to the welcome solace of his assigned room. He had eyed them as he passed, keeping them in his frame of vision until he was at his determined approximate safe distance.
Despite his pleas against it, he couldnโt help it when exhaustion finally set in, sometime far too early in the morning for the normal populace. When his blurry eyes finally failed him and his wandering mind clouded with darkness.
He expected the nightmares to come. The reminders of his sins and failures. The crimes heโd committed back in D.C. He expected to see that unnamed manโs face, open and bloody, the gunshot in his face a mirror image of Emmaโs as they both lurched towards him.
But the nightmares never came. Marcus slept soundly that night, with nothing polluting his dreams. Nothing came to him, no manifestation of guilt, no damned illusion of remorse come to terrorize him. He didn't wake up until late in the morning, far more hours of sleep than he'd grown accustomed to receiving.
Shortly after the โUSARILN Special Evacuation Unitโ was brought away inside the trucks, Angรฉlique faded into unconsciousness, her body and mind no longer able to repel the insidious call to sleep. Now that she was no longer needed, or rather felt the need to make herself useful and redeem herself from her mistakes, she submitted herself to this loss. Her body and soul would be able to recover now that stopped overexerting herself.
Despite being administered Christmasโ blood and healed from her blood loss, it still didnโt cure the raven-haired Aberration from the magical exhaustion she had been pushing herself throughout the afternoon. She simply laid there, unresponsive, although jerking around and muttering apologetic words in her sleep a few times, as she was gripped by the usual nightmares that haunted her slumber. For the entire trip, she was oblivious to the road that led them to the Zhangโs personal estate.
When she woke up, Angรฉlique was in an infirmary of sorts. God, this scenery became the more frequent, and this downright displeased the fallen idol. When she tried to grogilly stand up, a nurse nearby attended to her waking. What first struck Angel was the tone of the maidโs voice. It wasnโt dripping with hate, like what she had been used to in her previous hospital visits. Then, what surprised her the most was the mark on the young womanโs face, barely as old as Angel was.
An Arbiter?
The maid was courteous enough to lead the Aberration back to her assigned room after making sure she was good enough to stand on her own. Again, the young raven-haired woman was stricken by surprise to see her name so neatly engraved into a plaque, indicating what would be her room. Who had put effort into doing so much for Unit B? When she entered the room, itโs a if she had entered a traditional version of her room. As a matter of fact, the architecture looked a lot like the ones she used to see in the more sophisticated parts of a rural district.
As a matter of fact, it looks a lot like Grandmaโs home
Angel took some time to familiarize with her surroundings. The maid instructed her the same directives that were given to the others earlier today, before leaving the Aberration to her things.
It was surprising to see almost all of her stuff in this room. Clothes from Washington and the Institute, itโs as if it was already predetermined they were going to live here. Curiosity had stricken Angel, and she had the whole night to figure it out.
She spent the whole night browsing on her phone. She looked at maps, locating where exactly they were. She took in what was going on in Washington, which eventually led her to link and notifications from her phone about the recent updates about USARILNโs new prodigies. And she was at the middle of this storm, along the others. There was some strange sense of relief to no longer be referred to โBansheeโ, but there was some sort of irritation to be called โSirenโ, not for the mythic creatureโs enticing songs, but for the loud blaring sound police sirens made. IT was sort of humiliating to be compared to such, really.
But what Angel found the most terrifying were the footages. It all displayed her classmates, herself included, in acts of selfless heroism. There wasnโt a single trace of the tragedy that costed more than a few dozens life, orchestrated by the evacuation unit. This whole thing looked like an advertisement campaign to benefit the new USARIL kids. Whoever leaked these videos clearly wanted to show the world that these new emerging Subnaturals were heroes.
And thatโs what made Angรฉlique falter. She had resolved herself so much to be seen as a new monster, the โBansheeโ that everyone would be so afraid of. A monster that would outright terrify anyone sane enough to steer clear of her and her teammates if situation where fear would be the most efficient tool to get people moving, like in Washington.
But everything was for naught with these footages. People all over the internet now at mitigated opinions about her. Of course, there were the usual comments that she was a Subnatural and thus unworthy of trust, but there also the mentions of her that had killed people in the past and now some people even saying that she was redeeming herself by saving who she could.
So in reality, her reputation only grew for the better thanks to all that was leaked. She wasnโt regarded as solely a murderer now, she was starting to be perceived as a redeeming criminal. What does it all meant? Did mean that she was given a second chance, as undeserving as she was? Was it a door that would allow her to clear some of that mud over her name?
Angel was at a loss of what to do. She wanted to be strong, to stand up for her friends, to take the blame and do things that they couldnโt do, couldnโt afford to soil their reputation with. She needed to become the monster so that her other teammates would shine brighter. But on the opposite spectrum, she was given a second chance to make things right, even after what she did. Should she grab onto that buoy and try to wrench herself out from the abyss that was trying to claim her.
Doubts plagued the fallen Banshee-turning Siren. Her mind kept asking these questions as she navigated through the web and found more footage of her team, more gossips, more rumors.
Spending the entire night awake getting herself familiarized with her new surroundings and getting herself acquainted with the news about everything that happened while she was unconscious, sleep eventually tried to claim her once more.
But the insistent ringing of notifications coupled with the buzzing vibrations of her phone against the night table kept her awake as a tired Angel went to look at who couldโve texted her at five in the morning.
The drive was hell. Siena had tried her best to isolate herself, kept quiet and curled in with body language that screamed "stay away" in the hopes that it would work. Everyone was tired, so nobody would bother her...or so she had to hope. Still clutching to her phone as though it was a lifeline despite its uselessness, still wishing that the screen would somehow light up without power, that she could do something about the storm. She tried desperately to quell it with willpower, but it only grew stronger, roared in her ears when she pleaded for silence. Emotions took turns pummeling her when she begged for mercy.
Guilt, fear, remorse, betrayal, an endless cycle of ruthless batterings that left her fluttering helplessly in their wake like a dead leaf hung by its last fiber to the branch.
She wished for the comfort of beings far from human. Thought of August and wondered if she would have found comfort--
beat break ruin flesh blood bone beat break ruin flesh blood bone
--in the feeling of wanting to be more, and failing. That she was not alone, even if the distance between herself and the name was enormous despite how close it was to her. Silent. She had to stay quiet because she didn't think she could handle it if her voice were to break through. Had to keep everything out of sight.
beatbreakruinfleshbloodbone
And the hours passed, the cacophany in her head growing with each moment she chose to close herself in. Cracks on the inside, not on the out. She tried again to keep herself together, seal the cracks with something that could keep things together. Keep her together. No one to come and pull her heart away from its place and bring her closer to what she really was.
beatbreakguiltpainregretfleshbloodbone
And she was back in the middle of everything, a sea that dripped around her, a different type of storm. One that felt calm, but reminded her of what she was. Siena didn't resist, let it find purchase where it belonged. A cool feeling that dribbled over her, but something lingered in the distance.
Something she didn't know--wrong, she knew it. Something that worked her mind, worked her entirety, slowly seeping in, writhing when it could not find the cracks, boiling when it finally found its place. Slow and careful--no, not careful. Gentle. As if it didn't know what it was reaching for, the featherlight tough of a curious child on an unidentified trinket.
More soothing than anything that she could muster herself.
guiltblameregrethurtbloodbone
Siena curled closer in on herself and wished to be something further from human. She felt oddly--no, it wasn't odd at all, was it?--at home in the vastness of the estate they were staying at. No, "at home" was more comfortable than she felt. There was a better word. Familiar. This was the type of home that she was used to--hired help, people around. Absent authorities.
After they'd been given some direction to the house, after they'd been left to their own devices, Siena had broken off. She found herself blindly walking despite knowing, to some extent, where she would be the safest. Locked in her room. Away from everyone. Away from subnaturals she wished were people, and away from the cold, sharp feeling that cut into her every time her fingers slid over a smooth protrusion. Was it hurt? Betrayal? Or maybe it was some evolved version of guilt and shame.
Her feet had eventually taken her to the baths, a familiar sense of isolation. Cold tile beneath her feet, empty space that echoed any sound back to her without mercy. All too familiar, she thought to herself. Still, Siena felt her hand set her phone on the side of the faucet, still absentmindedly stepped into the shower stall and turned the water on. It struck her like an icy blast, her ruined clothing quickly soaking in the chilled water, clinging to her skin with the added weight.
All that red, and none of it sin.
beatbreakruinfleshbloodbone.
Siena felt glass against her back, a flimsy support that didn't keep her legs from finally giving out. Back into a curled position, knees pulled close to her chest as heated water spilled over her. The warmth masked the searing heat that had risen, clogged her throat and nose, but did nothing to remove it. It continued to burn as she wished that she could be August, Ilsa, Victor, Celia, Mugino, Kanon, anyone but Siena.
The first night after Padma had died, she'd done the same thing.
Allison Revel hadn't talk to anyone since DC. Hours spent in silent contemplation, considering the horrors of reality. Was everyone around Allison really as bad as they seemed? At first, they had all looked like good people in a bad situation, but the longer things went on, the more heartless they showed themselves to be. Wolves in sheep's clothing, monsters pretending to be people. It was funny, civilians would always be quick to call subnaturals monsters, and in the end they got what they asked for. A bunch of monsters.
Of course, Allison Revel was no different. She was guided by self-preservation and her disgusting stigma, just like every other Aberration. Though, Allison Revel hadn't killed any innocent civilians. Allison Revel hadn't even considered the option. Though, she did lust for them in some perverse part of her brain controlled by that damned stigma. Every tainted thought designed to drive her mad and force her to commit the same violence as the rest of her ilk. It was a brutal torture, all because of a single choice. And she didn't even have it the worst. Sure, Allison Revel wanted to fuck corpses, but she didn't have the urge to rip the life out of those around her. Her stigma only nudged her towards that ledge. Zoe's, and possibly Angel's pushed them off it without hesitation.
After they arrived, Allison found herself hiding out in her designated room. She had tried to rest, but sleep seemed to evade her. Instead, she found herself pacing around the room, unable to stand still and unwilling to leave the room. Outside the uncomfortably nice room were the monsters that Allison had fought beside, along with more unfamiliar subnatural faces filling out the staff. It was an odd detail, the staff, but not one that Allison wanted to dwell on.
Allison's mind floated back to Angelique Lachance. Allison had forgiven Ernie, and had tried to help Zoe. Still, they weren't exactly wonderful people. Zoe still gave into her stigma from time to time, and Ernie just didn't seem like someone to trust. Why did Allison think that Angel would be any different? She was never going to be some pure maiden, not in this world. Was Angel redeemable? Allison didn't know. There was only one way to find out.
Allison's thoughts were suddenly interrupted as the room around her seemed to fall away.
Allison stopped in her tracks as darkness replaced everything around her, leaving only a strange silhouette on the horizon. The fact that there even was a horizon in this pitch black landscape was incredible, almost as if that figure loomed just outside of the world, unwilling to follow the rules and fade into the sudden darkness.
Somehow, Allison wasn't surprised by the colorless abyss she found herself, nor afraid of the ominous entity that seemed to stare her down. In fact, it almost seemed to have a familiarity about it. The tired girl found herself stumbling towards the figure in the darkness, moving with some sort of urgency. The further she moved, the more clear the figure on the horizon became, and the larger it seemed to become. Eventually, though, Allison's legs came to stop, and she stared up at the figure, which still loomed beyond the horizon. It was clear now, the strange, impossible, unknowable figure wore the face of an old friend. Allison stared in the silence for what felt like an eternity at the impossible stranger. The face was not theirs, but they wore it anyway, and Allison knew that. But why that face in particular? Why haunt Allison with old memories?
"Why are you doing this!" Allison wanted to shout, but found her voice caught in her throat. Instead, only silence was carried to the impossible stranger. Eventually, a hand reached down from the figure, still far beyond the horizon. The hand reached towards Allison, and opened to offer her something: A spark. It was small, almost depressingly so, but it was a promise of life. Of power.
And Allison took it.
Allison's legs instantly returned to their pacing, solidifying the last few moments as nothing more than a dream. But why? Allison stumbled onto the bed, laying on her back and staring up into the darkness. She hadn't experienced something like that in weeks, and the last one was back during that horrifying first battle. Was this the same sort of dream?
Allison didn't give it much thought. Her eyes were finally feeling heavy. She could finally escape from the day's horrible events, if only for a few hours.
No, it had been quiet the entire time. No one was interested in talking during that entire ride, most people sleeping or on their phones or simply refusing to look at anyone else. This was the true USARILN truck experience, wasnโt it? No one chirpy enough to talk to anyone else. Not even Marcus, who had been able to keep a positive attitude for the longest of times. Just a looming sense of dread and exhaustion that accompanied the knowledge that they werenโt heading back to the institution after all. What had the Director wanted them for in Washington anyways?
Surely, they werenโt there just to thwart off a monster attack that none of them were equipped to handle, were they?
Alone in the library, Brent stared aimlessly at the blue screen of the monitor. The lights were dimmed within the study, a blue pallor cast over him. The art gallery may have interested him before. A massage chair sounded great, considering how he never had a chance to do any stretching after all that running. Heโd have loved to chow down as well, sample the culinary skill of Zhangโs subnatural maids. A nighttime walk down the beach would have done miracles for organizing his jumbled up thoughts as well. But he was here instead, in a small library, surrounded by the technology that his magic wanted to devour so badly, no eyes here to observe what monster machines he cooked up.
But he wasnโt here to indulge in his curiosity either.
More than a dozen tabs to different news sites, both national and local, as well as various social media outlets. Youtube as well, and a couple constantly refreshed Google queries. But there was nothing โfreshโ. Nothing on social media provided a harrowing first person account, and even news reports seemed to only be handling general, broad information. Tragedies turned into statistics. Wide pans of rows of evacuees, instead of personal accounts. And, above allโฆa wealth of shots from the cameras that they had been cuffed with, โleakedโ to show the DC incident from the position of the subnaturals of Unit B. And none of them, from what he saw, showed what had occurred during the evacuation teamโs encounter with the regular mob.
As a matter of fact, all those released clips served to make them lookโฆheroic.
Not a single smear. Not a single stain. Not a single sin. For a city that hated subnaturals, for a city that had been attacked by subnaturals, the media was reporting on the incident with as much tact and as little prejudice as possible. There was that one video of Christmas, healing injured masses like some sort of Jesus figure. There was himself, giving out orders like some sort of superpowered GI. There was Angelic, aiding with the rescue as if she hadnโt just screamed a bunch of civilians to death. And there were reddit threads. Oh, so many reddit threads, people just playing with what to name the new heroes of DC, the new team that will replace the Precursors.
Before his amethyst eyes, more of those vapid, shameless comments scrolled by, not a single one pointing him towards what had caused everyone to turn away from each other, to enforce a steely, tense silence.
Nothing.
Nothing but lies.
But crimes didnโt disappear just because people looked away.