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Alloy felt
like he was going to be sick. All around him, Metal X was sending
silver ribbons flashing past him, trying to latch on. He could only
manage two or three at once; whatever made them so hard to detect
with his metal sense also made them resistant to his powers.
The only thing
keeping him out of their grasp was the combined effort of Isp and
Osp who juked, looped and at time threw him out of the path of those
he couldn't effectively halt or deflect. This kept him safe, but
also felt distinctly like an hour in a tilt-a-whirl.
His first mistake,
he now knew, was trying to move past Metal X instead of around him.
The other man was fast enough with his extruded grapnels without
relinquishing the lead his initial flight with Tink had afforded.
Another ribbon
missed him by more than a yard. It's blind course and the blind
courses of dozens of others told him something important: the silver
blob Metal X controlled wasn't sentient like the twins were. X had
to aim and 'fire' each one himself, the sheer number he sent out
preventing him from fine tuning their course in flight.
There was comfort
in that fact: Alloy, Isp and Osp had Metal X outnumbered.
That comfort
didn't last long. Another streamer of strange metal missed him by
the width of the street below, but it didn't miss: With an edge
sharper than steel, it plunged into the brick Osp was angling for
as a handhold, denying the tentacle purchase. As Osp flailed for
a new hold, Alloy's weight dragged on Isp and they all three dipped
far too low.
Another ribbon
pulverized the windowsill Isp had hold of, severing the last obstacle
between Alloy and gravity. Pinwheeling in air, the tentacles formed
desperate, barbed anchors which they dug into the buildings on either
side, ripping through brick and reinforced concrete in long gouges.
All the while,
Metal X refused to relent, destroying sections of wall as quickly
as Isp or Osp caught into them. While Alloy's fall was slowed, he
was still coming down with greater force than a parachutist. A parked
car finally broke his fall.
He hit belly
first, hard enough to force the air from his lungs and rattle his
teeth in spite of the protection his armor provided. Struggling
to breathe, he couldn't get his wits about him in time to deflect
the tendril he sensed wrapping his leg.
Without ceremony,
he was flipped off the car and landed hard on his back. The static
feeling in his metal sense pressed against his armored boot—and
stopped. It was trying to spread as it had done with the railing
earlier except this time, Alloy assumed, his powers—the powers
that formed his armor and hardened it and made it deform to absorb
shock—were preventing it in the same way that selfsame power
couldn't effect metal under the effects of magic.
At the same
time, he had an epiphany about the strangeness the substance was
causing with his metal sense. It wasn't static at all, but something
like watching sand flow: he wasn't looking at a coherent whole,
but thousands or millions of individual pieces.
Isp and Osp
rarely made sounds on their own. Now they let loose with shrieks
like a massive slab of sheet metal being continually and violently
torn. With this war cry, they slashed the tendril holding Alloy
to bits. The moment it was separated from the whole, the streamer
became a solid band of ordinary iron.
The significance
was lost as a fusillade of other silvery lashes slammed into the
twins and drove them back. Metal X stepped forward. “You're
wasting your time and putting people in danger needlessly. Just
tell me where I can find Whitecoat and you can get back to the girl.”
A dangerous gleam came to his eye, “I'd hate for something
to happen to her; alone in the city.”
Beneath his
closed helm, Alloy glared and started to force himself up. “You
don't want to go there.” Even breathing heavy, he put a dangerous
edge on the warning.
“I don't
want to, but I will.” Two rods extended from just under Metal
X's arm pits and struck Alloy in the chest, pushing him back to
the ground. “If I don't find Whitecoat.”
Metal sense
worked over time; Alloy felt out what he had to work with around
him; a fire escape, dumpster, two parcel boxes, three hydrants,
a half dozen light posts and, of course, the cars themselves. Traffic
on the street was light, but getting thicker as drivers slammed
on the brakes to avoid the confrontation.
A plan was
forming, but he needed time. “Why do you want him so bad anyway?”
The onslaught
of tendrils keeping Isp and Osp at bay eased and the sheath of material
covering the man himself boiled slightly. His concentration was
wavering. A dark look passed over his face. “He's responsible
for my father's death and destroyed his life's work.”
Alloy wasn't
prepared for that. “That's impossible! 'Coat would never kill
anyone!”
The rods working
to keep Alloy from rising pressed into him harder, straining even
the enhanced metal. “Did I say anything about killing him?”
Years
ago.
The lab Zhang
promised was built against the seaward wall of a warehouse on the
Tong controlled Canterbury Docks. It was cramped and stank of fish,
mildew and salt, but it was more than adequately outfitted for the
work the Woo father and son would be doing.
The problem
came from Caldwell. The man was dead, but in death, he managed to
present one last hindrance upon Zhang's efforts with the nanites:
the Type VII nanites themselves. While the data he fed Zhang was
revolutionary by itself, Type VII was a step beyond what Randy had
programmed for.
And Caldwell
and his assistant had destroyed all the data and control programming
related to Type VII. All they had left to go on was a single suspension
unit of one thousand twenty-four nanites to try and reverse engineer.
They'd been
at it for weeks now and the lab was growing the same sense dulling
familiarity as the room they'd been held in previously for Randy.
His patience was growing thin with his repeated failures to even
establish a coherent command signal to the nanites.
Meanwhile,
his father was growing more and more distant, focusing always on
trying to fabricate new nanites and speaking less and less. It seemed
to Randy that he was forgetting about the goal of eventual escape.
There was a
brief uproar near the front of the warehouse, out of sight of the
lab and moments later, a small contingent of armed men came into
view, fanning out hear and there among the crates and lifts. Each
carried an automatic rifle and was dressed for nothing less than
war.
“Something's
happening, father.” Randy said in English as more and more
man took up positions.
“Something
is always happening.” Woo said sourly, refusing to look up
from his work. “Maybe it's a police raid.”
“If that's
so, we're saved.” Randy said hopefully.
“Or brought
in as accomplices.” was the flat reply.
“Anything's
better than this.” Said his son. “But I don't think
it's the police. They look like they're searching for something.”
His father didn't answer and Randy was left to wonder what they
could be searching for with machine guns in their own warehouse.
Two of the
Tong guards made their way to the lab proper, weapons up and at
the ready as they scanned the area with hard eyes, taking care to
look under the tables. One of them touched the com on his shoulder.
“Lab's secure.” He reported, “As are the prisoners.”
Randy noted
that not only did the man speak English, but he was also Caucasian.
The Tongs didn't like hiring non-Chinese, so the man was likely
a mercenary hired in desperation. Desperation for what, Randy couldn't
tell.
“What's
going on?” Randy asked the men.
They ignored
him, taking positions on either end of the lab space, facing the
rows that led to them.
Something creaked
above. The guards didn't hear it, but Randy did. He looked up and
up into the darkness of that swallowed the warehouse ceiling.
He saw him
there, crouched on a rafter: swathed in a duster made of light tan
colored leather with a Stetson pushed down over his eyes and a bandanna
covering his mouth and nose. The man looked like a cowboy of legend
until he shifted and Randy could see a hands encased in heavy duty
worker's gloves lined with wires that fed a blue glowing disc in
the palms.
The man on
the rafters saw Randy see him and with a glance toward the rest
of the warehouse, leapt to the seaward wall and started running
down it.
“It's
him!” A shout went up from another part of the warehouse and
a bright light was shone on the intruder. “The Whitecoat!”
Machine gun fire came from two directions, punching holes in the
cheap, weak wall around him.
“I really
hate that name.” Still ten feet off the floor, Whitecoat leapt
at one of the guards in the lab, catching him in the hollow of his
shoulder with a kick that had all his weight behind it. The unfortunate
guard staggered forward and couldn't keep his head from slamming
into a table laden with tools.
The other guard
span and tried to draw a bead with his weapon, but the Whitecoat
was already rushing him. Halfway through the charge, he slammed
his hands against the wall where they adhered, and used the leverage
and momentum to swing both legs around into a kick that would have
been impossible for a normal human. The kick hit the guard in the
chin and chest, sending him to the floor.
There was a
creaking complaint from the wall as the Whitecoat followed through
and before he could land, it gave way. A three foot section broke
off, causing the hero to stumble. Salt air and filtered moonlight
swept in.
After a second
spent shaking the planks free of his hands, Whitecoat turned to
the two scientists. Randy didn't move, too shocked by the entrance
to formulate words. They weren't needed as he was passed by in favor
of the glove box containing the suspension unit housing the nanites.
A telescoping
baton was produced from beneath the duster and with a blow no normal
man could muster, he smashed clear top of the box open.
“What
are you doing?” Woo hobbled up to him, favoring the cane now
more than ever. His other hand reached out to arrest Whitecoat's
hand as it pulled the suspension unit out. It looked like it was
made of glass capped with brushed chrome, but in reality, it was
a cylinder of transparent aluminum with platinum end caps. Inside
was a mercurial liquid suspended in other liquid that resembled
hazy water.
“Finishing
the job.” Whitecoat answered. “This thing they've got
you working on; it's dangerous. You two get out of here; I guarantee
the guards have better things to do than chase you right now.”
He gently tugged
his hand free from the older man's grasp and positioned the vial
directly over the blue disc in his hand. There was a surging sound
and inside the suspension, the silvery liquid sparked and went black.
A howl of rage
escaped Woo. “No!” He shoved the hero with all his might
and raised his cane to strike him.
Whitecoat didn't
pay any attention to the shove, but he did see another guard coming
with his automatic ready to fire. “Watch out!” He grabbed
the unsteady old man's arm and pulled him around, putting his back
between him and the barrage of bullets.
Randy threw
himself on the floor as bullets tore through the air. He was shocked
to find the Whitecoat simply standing there, head bowed, shielding
his father as round after round ricocheted off his back.
After what
seemed like hours, but were probably only a few dozen seconds, the
Whitecoat lowered the livid form of Woo to the floor beside Randy.
Still taking bullets to the back, he tipped up his hat to look Randy
in the eye. “When I say move, you get him out of here, you
got that?” Randy nodded dumbly. A shotgun blast mad him flinch
and then curse. “These bastards are going to ruin my favorite
coat.”
“You
can't.” Woo pleaded. “It's too valuable.”
“Sorry,
sir.” Whitecoat frowned. “It's gotta end here.”
He glanced at Randy. “Move!”
In a single,
smooth motion, he grabbed the stool Randy usually sat at, turned
and throw it one handed into a trio of men with guns that had been
advancing on him.
For Randy,
the rest was just noise and thunder. He remembered diving through
the hole in the wall with his father and the desperate swim to dry
land. He remembered and explosion inside the warehouse and a long,
shivering walk to get off the Canterbury Docks. He remembered feeling
safe, telling his father that the nightmare was over.
And then he
remembered realizing his father was having trouble breathing, grasping
his arm and then his chest. He remembered three days in the hospital.
He remembered saying goodbye.
The harrying
blows against Isp and Osp were coming slower now. In relating the
story to Alloy, Randolph Woo, Metal X had taking his concentration
off his weapon and put it onto himself.
Alloy felt
bad about using that kind of vulnerability against the man, but
realized he wouldn't get another shot. “That's why you want
to kill the Whitecoat? But he tried to save your father, not hurt
him. He couldn't have known any of this.”
“Shut
up.” Randolph snapped. “I don't care what you think.
You're just a means to an end. As Damascus, you worked with him.
Tell me where he is.” His tone was cold and threatening.
For the brief
moment, the attacks on Isp and Osp faltered completely as his focus
zeroed in on his anger and loss.
In his mind's
eye, Warrick worked in sequence: liquefy the screws in the base
of a street light, crush and bend the threads in a hydrant cap in
an exacting manner, do the same for the hydrant across the street,
and finally, finish it off but putting his full power into the traffic
light in the intersection behind him.
It came together
in the space of a heartbeat. Isp snagged the lamppost as it fell
and swung it laterally at Metal X like a major leaguer. Predictably,
he formed the silvered stuff up into a tower shield with spikes
that rooted into the ground against the mighty blow. The street
light bent and twisted around the defense.
But in protecting
himself on that front, he'd left himself open on others. Without
threads to hold them in place against the incredible pressure they
contained, the fire hydrant caps burst off like champaign corks,
One caught X in his lightly armored hip while the other slammed
into his knee.
Randolph cried
out in pain. For a moment, the tower shield and even his armor dulled
and solidified into an amalgam of iron and steel. There's when the
last wave of Alloy's attack hit.
The traffic
signal didn't bend or liquefy, it simply transformed into a monsoon
of whirling metal with a solid striking head at its fore. It stormed
down the street with an undulating, screw-drive motion, picking
up speed as it went.
A trio of silver
lashes whipped out and grabbed a nearby building, pulling him out
of the path of the powerful attack. Rage burned in his eyes. He
recalled the tower shield into a maelstrom of liquid metal as he
watched Alloy regain his feet.
With a wordless
cry of anger and frustration, the whirlwind turned into a huge hammer
on the end of an unfathomably long chain. Before Isp and Osp could
move to block, it came in horizontally with the speed of a cracking
whip.
The hammer
head rang against Alloy's armor and resounded down the street. The
armor buckled. White-hot pain flashed through Alloy's mind, radiating
out from his ribs and he found himself flying through the air. He
clipped the corner of a building, taking a small cloud of brick
with him as he did, and slammed into the back of a parked car.
More than a
dozen segmented legs spidered out from Metal X and carried him to
his fallen foe. “Tell me where the Whitecoat is!” He
screamed. “I didn't want to have to do that, but so help me—”
He never saw
the blow coming. It came from the side in the form of two feet in
white ceramic boots with glowing blue discs on the soles. They impacted
him on the rib cage and upper shoulder and the force smashed him
through the window of the store Alloy had clipped.
The Whitecoat
rebounded from the blow and landed in a neat three points stance
in the middle of the street, maintaining it through judicious application
of his boots and gauntlets. “Lay off him. He really doesn't
know how to find me.” He rose into a combat stance. “Now
me on the other hand? I think I can arrange an introduction.”
Tink watched
the blocks go past from the back of a cab. She was staring it with
a bag from an electronics store and another from the sporting goods
store across the street from it.
She had not
idea what she was thinking: she didn't have any powers and she'd
more than likely just get in the way. But there was no helping it;
she'd been inspired and if she was right, she might be able to help.
If he needed
her help that was. In spite of herself, she blushed. If he didn't
need any help, Warrick wouldn't be happy about her phone call. Then
again, if he did need help, he'd be glad she did it. Either way,
she could chalk it up to worry.
Her eyes turned
back to the passing streets. And hoped that she was worrying over
nothing.
To
Be Continued…
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