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(This story takes place
six months prior to Descendants #0)
It had been
a very long day and I was suffering from a serious deficiency of
vitamin sleep. Not only is playing prelate (I’ve given up
on trying to get people to say ‘superhero’; the media
has won this battle) tiring in and of itself, but it was October,
meaning that midterms were coming up, and on top of that, the Hip
Sing Tong criminal organization had smartened up and hired their
own super strong muscle.
My body was
aching with what would soon become bruises courtesy of a spark jockey
bruiser with the oh-so-creative name of Tank, who had served up
a punch hard enough to completely ruin several sections of the armor
hidden in my namesake coat. It really sucks that Alan Roschard gets
bruises when the Whitecoat gets punched.
Home was a
distant, beautiful oasis where no one was trying to hit me, shoot
me, ignite me, or otherwise annoy me. Luckily, I don’t have
to worry about getting stuck in rush hour or sitting at the bus
stop. For me, home is only a few leaps away.
Yes, leaps.
Super strength is a wonderful thing; I can jump six vertical stories
from standing and if I get a running start, I can launch myself
almost sixty yards.
And no, I don’t
call it ‘enhanced strength’. We, as a society, have
called it super strength for well over a century; ever since the
first graphic novels featuring characters sporting it appeared in
the 1930’s. I don’t see the point in changing that now,
just because in the past thirty of forty years super strength is
a reality thanks to psionics being born and cybernetics taking big
leaps forward and the media thinks that’s a reason to make
it sound scientific.
I’m super
strong. I’m not ‘enhancedly’ strong or whatever
crap they want to call me.
But we’re
veering away from the point. I can leap pretty much wherever I need
to go and I’ve developed my costume just for that purpose.
My boots and gloves contain powerful electrostatic generators that
can adhere to most building materials. That means that if I can’t
leap a given tall building in a single bound, I can stick to it
and jump again rather than falling in an embarrassing and decidedly
coyote-like fashion.
It may not
be flying, but if you’ve ever tried to drive into Brooklyn
during rush hour, you understand why I’m a fan.
“Whitecoat!”
someone shouted from below as I sailed overhead. My adoring public.
I must hear someone shout in recognition five or six times…
a month. But every time, it makes a crappy day where people have
tried to kill me seem less crappy.
Me and the
handful of other prelates that smack around the Big Apple’s
criminal element are just the junior varsity squad in the eyes of
the people. The star quarterback as prelates go is John Harding,
Infinity. He’s the heavy hitter; armed with flight, super
strength and super toughness. Of course, he can’t be bothered
stopping the mundane baddies that could make day to day life utter
shit for everyone. He only fights escaped mutants, rogue psionics,
and other ‘powered’ threats. Conveniently, he usually
does this in view of a news camera or fifty.
God, I hate
him. He’s even got a goddamn dimple in his chin. I can’t
prove it, But I think they built the bastard out of parts of lesser
prelates. You know, like me. Damn it.
Of course,
my girlfriend is one of his biggest fans. I go over to her place
and get to see every piece of merchandise Infinity is getting royalties
on that the Whitecoat isn’t. I often wondered if she’d
lay off worshipping him if she knew who I was.
Still, I think
it’s pretty crumby for any guy to try and impress his girlfriend
while in the shadow of Captain Dimple Chin.
But I digress;
Janine’s a fan of all prelates. She has bootleg T-shirts with
me and Sister Sacred and poor, deceased Firebug on them. Hell, she
even buys the stupid Prelates of New York comic (which, I might
add, recently pitted me against a fish monster I have never met
and convinced me that I will leave any aquatic baddies to Johnny
Harding).
I looked to
wave at the guy that shouted my name, but he was gone; probably
wandered off in the time I sat there, clinging to the wall, thinking
about how much I hate New York’s greatest son. Damn, I think
too much. Normally, that doesn’t bother me, but I really think
I owe the people that support me at least a wave. Hell, I owe them
an autograph and a hug.
Sighing, I
gathered myself up and leapt to the top of the building. My building
was the next one over. When I first moved in, I bitched and moaned
about the fact that my window faced a blank wall. Now that I’m
the Whitecoat, I couldn’t be happier; it lets me come and
go as I please.
My first warning
should have been the open window. I’m not a fresh air person
even when I’m inside the apartment. Give me air that’s
been cycled through fifty or elven dozen filters first and I’m
happy. Call it a holdover from when I still had allergies.
So the window
should have told me something was up, but I remind you that I was
sleep deprived, overdosing on fists to the body, and stressing over
exams. I demand absolution.
The second
warning was that the lamp on the nightstand was on. I’m dirt
poor; mostly because of the prelate gig. Even buying scrap parts
and assembling all of my gear myself, most of the check I got from
the University for the my traumatic experience the year before goes
to keeping the Whitecoat on the streets and kicking Tong ass. I
do not leave lights on. Ever.
Again, though,
I reiterate: Alan want sleep. If it wasn’t for the fact that
I really need to survey the damage Tank had done, I probably would
have just collapsed on the bed and slept in costume. I’ve
done it before.
Weary, I climbed
through the window and sat on the sill and worked the controls of
my boots. The blue glow of the electrostatic generators faded and
there was a low hiss as the air cushions deflated around my feet.
My best design ever. I may get smashed to bits, but damn it, my
feet will be comfortable. If only I could submit those boots as
my engineering thesis without totally blowing my cover.
Next came the
gloves, with similar effects. The gloves are more complicated than
simple gauntlets. With proper gestures, I can harden the armor in
my coat, activate and deactivate the generators, and control the
heads-up display in my very fine hat.
Normally, the
coat would be next, but it was unusually warm and the bandanna that
hid my face was stifling me. Why was it so warm? I normally kept
the place cold, not only to keep heating cost low, but because that’s
the way I like it. I’m a polar person by nature. If I had
my way, I’d sleep in my skivvies in the arctic with a penguin
for a pillow.
I only turned
up the heat when I had Janine over… It was about that time
that I really noticed the room around me. The bed was made—something
I never did unless threatened—and turned down. The cases for
all my flat format discs were neatly restored to their cabinet.
And my ConquesTech Walkalong portable gaming system was on the bed.
It was still on and paused, showing me that someone was playing
Wolf War IV.
Compulsive
cleaning, plus playing my video games equaled… I stopped untying
my bandanna.
Fate is a smarmy
bitch. If I had figured it out a split second earlier, I could have
kicked my boots under the bed and skedaddled out the window (I’m
sure I’d survive the fall). But I didn’t and as a result,
the next thought that went through my head was drowned out by a
scream.
I looked up
to see Janine standing in the doorway. Janine Kazhdan, my girlfriend
of the past year, is a vision most of the time. She’s about
average height with frizzy, dark brown hair, big brown eyes and
a body that I’d got ten rounds against Tank daily for. She’s
also got other qualities, but seeing as she was dressed only in
my #3.14 jersey, the body was pretty much all I could think of.
Also, the screaming.
I had to do something about the screaming.
“Wait!”
I said, throwing out my hands like that was going to convince her.
I remembered I was still ‘the Whitecoat’ and put on
what I like to call The Voice and tried again. “Wait, citizen,
this isn’t what it looks like.”
I don’t
know if it was The Voice, or the fact that she finally recognized
one of the prelates she follows religiously, but she calmed down
quickly in any event.
“Ohmigod.”
She squeaked, eyes widening. “You’re… you’re
you. I mean, of course you’re you, but…”
“The
one and only Whitecoat.” I said with a confident nod and a
tip of my Stetson.
She mouthed
a few words I figured were ‘wow’, and then looked around.
“But, uh… why are you in my boyfriend’s bedroom?”
One would think
that being a prelate; which entails maintaining a secret identity
(unless you’re Infinity), skulking about the city and generally
being adept at deception would help with coming up with lies on
the spot. One would be wrong.
“Uh…
yes. Your boyfriend’s bedroom…” I stammered, looking
around in hopes that someone had left a copy of One Thousand and
One Reasons to Traipse Around Strange Bedrooms thereabouts. “Well,
you see, I’m in the middle of an… investigation?”
I swear to
god, I’m better at trading barbs with Tong goons. Seriously,
I’d never figured on having to come up with an excuse for
being in my own bedroom.
“He’s
not in any trouble is he?” Fear flitted in Janine’s
eyes. “Alan couldn’t have done anything. He’s
a good guy and even if he wasn’t he wouldn’t even had
time to. Right now, he’s off tutoring high school physics.
He does that four days a week. And any time he’s not doing
that, he’s with me or his friends.” The words tumbled
out of her mouth. I suddenly felt guilty, hearing her use my cover
story as an alibi.
“No,
I’m… he’s not in any trouble. I just need to…”
my eyes fell on my computer over in the corner. “…I
need to access his files.” I took a step toward it, but it
was about that time that Fate decided to pay me back for that ‘smarmy
bitch’ comment.
I had been
in the process of untying the bandanna around my neck when Janine
interrupted me. Gravity now took over the rest of the job. Trooper
that I am, I tried in vain to catch it with my teeth. But down it
came and out came the cat I’d kept in the bag for over a year
came yowling out.
We just stood
there in silence for a while as the bandanna fluttered to the ground.
Part of me was terrified. Part of me prayed that maybe, just maybe,
the hat covering my eyes would fool her. A little part of me, outnumbered
by the other two, was relieved.
I saw Janine’s
eyes dart to the gloves I’d tossed on the bed. She was making
certain I wasn’t just wearing some cheesy Halloween costume.
Then she looked at me. Her expression was unreadable.
“Janine.”
I said, just to break the silence. I really didn’t know what
to say after that. Luckily, she did.
Taking the
three steps it took to reach me, she reached up and pulled off my
hat. My own light brown hair dropped almost to my shoulders. As
usual, I needed a haircut something fierce.
Not taking
her eyes from mine, Janine held my hat with an odd reverence. The
Hat; almost as much of a trademark as my cheap, plastic trench coat.
Janine had been delighted to find a strip mall in Jersey that sold
fake Stetsons that looked exactly like the Whitecoat’s. Little
did she know that that was the place I ordered mine from.
Finally, my
voice came back. “About now would be a good time for truth,
right hon?” I tried to give her one of the cheesy smiles I
give her when I do something stupid. Whatever she was thinking,
it didn’t stop her from thinking it and it didn’t get
her to say anything either.
“Well,
obviously, I’m not doing any tutoring. I’m the Whitecoat.”
Maybe I can
change my name to Blindingly Obvious.
Janine nodded
slowly and looked down at the hat, noting the organic LED I put
in there to let me see even with the brim pulled all the way down.
“Yeah, I gathered.” She said sarcastically. Idly, she
flipped the hat over onto the bed. “But… I mean, how?”
Her soft hands reached up and touched me on either side of my face.
“You said you were a psionic, is this…?”
Psionics. Another
media trumped up term for people born with weird physiologies that
give them even weirder powers. I shook my head. “No, I was
telling the truth; the only psionic power I have is a supped up
immune system. I didn’t lie about that.”
“I wouldn’t
call keeping this secret a lie.” Janine said, trying to sooth
my guilt. “But now that I know, a little explanation is in
order, Alan. If what you do isn’t a psionic power, what is
it?”
I sighed. I
really didn’t want to discuss that, even with her. But she
was right, I did owe her this. I stepped back from her and shrugged
out of my coat, tossing it aside. It made a loud thump sound as
it hit the floor. Thanks to the titanium and ceramic armor plates,
the thing weights around one hundred pounds. “You’d
better sit down; it’s a bit of a story.”
“I’ve
got plenty of time.” She said. “I was going to sleep
here anyway; my roommate is having a party.”
I nodded and
waited for her to make herself comfortable on the bed before sitting
down beside her. Letting out another sigh, I started at the beginning.
“Remember Professor Caldwell?” It wasn’t much
of a beginning, but I had to ease her into this.
She nodded.
“You were his lab aide last year, before we started dating.
He got a grant and left for Sweden, right?”
“Not
right.” I said gravely. Funny, I usually adore all this ‘dark
secret’ crap when it’s happening to a fictional character.
Not so much when it’s my dark secret. Normally, I can push
it to the back of my mind, even though Caldwell is the reason pretty
much everything in my life has happened the way it has. Even getting
together with Janine. “He’s dead.”
Holy hell,
why did I just drop it like that? In my head, I had planned on tip-toeing
around it, maybe glossing it over wholesale. My adrenaline must
have been having a field day with my speech center.
Janine gasped.
Caldwell had been her advisor as well as my professor and part time
boss. “What?! How? And why didn’t you tell me? That
has nothing to do with you being—“
“It has
everything to do with me being the Whitecoat.” I interrupted
her. Hesitantly, I put a hand on her shoulder. She was near to tears.
Caldwell had played a big role in her life. Both our lives. The
shoulder just wasn’t cutting it. I put my arm around her and
drew her close.
“Then
why, Alan? What happened?” She almost pleaded. Janine doesn’t
plead. She tells you to do something or she tricks you into doing
it. Hearing her getting close to that broke my heart.
“The
Prof…” I started. Oh sure, now I was able to dance around
saying things straight out. “He… The University denied
him an extension on their grant for his nanite research. He had
already invented a new type—Type VII to be exact. They were
amazing, hon; they got their instructions from electrical impulse
transmission instead of being preprogrammed. They were ten times
as efficient and could be reprogrammed on the fly.”
“Alan,
please…” Janine started. She must have thought I was
going off on a tangent.
“It’ll
be important later.” I promised, a bit more bitterly than
I would have liked her to hear from me. “The point was, he
knew he was on to something big. All he needed to do was figure
out a way to fit them with a failsafe. As it stood, if the impulse
control was lost, Type VII posed a very real threat of going uncontrolled
and starting a grey goo scenario; end of the world stuff.”
“So he
made a deal with the devil. The Hip Sing Tong would give him the
money to continue in exchange for getting some nanites of their
own to play with. I honestly don’t know why they wanted them,
but there we were.”
“Did
you know about that?” Janine looked up at me and I felt a
dagger in my chest. In retrospect, the evidence had been there.
I should have put it together and stopped the Prof before this whole
mess started. Hell, I probably should have encouraged him to trash
Type VII the second we realized they were potentially Armageddon
in a jar. But the student doesn’t question the Master and
in Prof’s own words, ‘throwing potential away instead
of doing good with it is almost as bad as doing bad with it’.
Thanks, Prof.
“Not
then.” I replied. “Not until…” About that
time, I choked up a little. The events of that night were still
burned in my mind. They always will be unless I manage to find and
pay off a mentalist to erase them for me. And don’t think
I wouldn’t do it in a New York minute. Finally, I collected
myself, hugging Janine a little tighter. Not too tight though; I
can bench a half ton after all.
“Not
until that night. He came in and told me we had to dump the whole
line of Type VII into the lab microwave. Burn them all out. Seems
the Tong had grown impatient and was sending a guy to take the nanites
whether they were ready or not.”
I remembered
loading ampoule after ampoule of tarnished silver looking liquid
into the microwave. It had thrown off crazy blue sparks, then collapsed
into blackened chunks after ten seconds. If I hadn’t been
scared of getting shot or sank to the bottom of the Hudson, I would
have thought it was cool.
“We didn’t
make it.” I continued. “We almost did. The beakers holding
the main colonies were still out and we were about to nuke them
when the Tong hitter came in.” I decided to spare Janine the
gory details. “He got the Prof. Got me too because it wasn’t
good to leave a witness.”
She looked
up at me. I don’t know when she had started actually crying,
but her face was red and tearstained. “He shot you? But you’re
fine. I remember you spending a night in the university hospital,
but they would have kept you for longer than a night, wouldn’t
they?”
“If they
had found a bullet. Or proof they I’d been shot, yes.”
I agreed. “But the hitter shot me through one of the beakers.
The bullet lodged right in my spine… along with the nanites.”
Janine stopped
crying and sat up, away from me. “Are you saying… they’re
in you?”
Honestly, I
don’t blame her for that reaction. They should have killed
me. Medical nanites are one thing; stimulating cell growth, attacking
cancers and whatnot. But they aren’t for long term use and
usually, they’re implanted by doctors, not hitmen. “They
saved my life.” I said. “They also disassembled the
bullet into more nanites and repaired my spinal column – all
before I even got to the hospital.”
“Are
you serious?” She gasped. “That’s impossible.
I’ve never heard of anything like this…”
“You
never heard of type VII.” I pointed out. “They take
their instructions from my own body’s electrical impulses.
An apparently, my body’s instructions are ‘stronger,
faster, tougher’.” That didn’t make her less incredulous.
She’d just found out her boyfriend was a real life superhero,
but this was giving her trouble. “Look, I know it’s
hard to take, but I’ll prove it.” I looked around for
a convenient iron bar to bend, but I was fresh out. “Uh, pick
up my coat.”
If it were
possible, I believe Janine would have looked even more incredulous.
My coat looks like a cheap, light, plastic trench coat. I buy them
in bulk and unfortunately, the cheapest mass produced trenches are
the stupid white number made in Maine that have since become my
unfortunate namesake.
I slit open
the linings and fill it with plates made of ceramic material lined
with titanium. With a command from my gloves, the plates magnetize
and lock together, becoming a bulletproof armor. The upswing is
that hiding the armor in the coat makes dopes like the Tong’s
gunmen think I’m bulletproof in and of myself. The downside
is that after a few bullets, the coat falls apart. Hence my bulk
buying.
But the other
effect is that my coat weighs more than some large dogs and it’s
awkward to lift without super strength. Case in point: my tiny,
tiny girlfriend. She gave it a good go, grunting and trying to get
better footing, but she just couldn’t lift it all the way
off the ground.
Smirking, I
picked it up with one hand and tossed it on the bed. “See?”
I asked.
“I guess
I’ll have to take your word for it.” She said.
“Good.”
I nodded, letting her come sit next to me again. “So, I woke
up in the hospital the next morning with a spokesman from the university
offering a non-disclosure agreement. Apparently, the other beaker
full of Type VII had gone missing and the University was trying
to cover its ass by covering up the Prof’s death.”
“And
you took it.” Janine said, disapprovingly.
“I’m
only human.” I said lamely. There really was no excuse. He
offered me free tuition and a monthly check for the next decade
in exchange for my silence. I took it because my student loans were
already piling up and I couldn’t imagine of lifetime of debt.
“I should have gone straight to the news providers with the
story,” I said, “but I reasoned that doing that might
not only cause panic, but cause the guys who took the nanites to
panic as well.” This was true; though I came to this conclusion
somewhere further don the line. Janine didn’t give up her
disapproving glare, so I changed the subject quickly.
“Anyway,
the Tong had the other nanites and without safeguards, they could
have ended New York by tripping.” I said. “So I went
after them myself. Back then, I haven’t built all my gadgets,
so all I had was a bandanna to hide my face and a Kevlar vest I
stole out of my dad’s closet.” My father the cop. He
still doesn’t appreciate ‘busy bodies’ like the
Whitecoat being in his business.
“You
stopped them?” Janine asked.
I sighed. Sore
subject, you see. Not painful like what happened to Professor Caldwell,
but it pisses me off. “I got the nanites back and nuked them…
but none of the goons I rounded up talked. The higher ups –
the guys that ordered the hit, the guys that wanted Type VII for
god knows what – they’re still out there.”
My wonderful
understanding girlfriend smiled at me. “And you’ve been
fighting them all this time. You even got a sidekick in on it too.”
More tears, happy tears, sprang form her eyes. “You’re
amazing.” She put her arms around me and kissed me.
“The,
uh… sidekick wasn’t my idea.” I added hastily.
I do not take responsibility for my super powered fanboy.
It took me three months to get him off my back and convince his
parents to send him to the Academy in Langley. “But I promise,
Janine, I’m going to get those guys. I’m going to stop
them from doing this again and I’m going to make the Prof
proud.”
Janine kissed
me again. “You will.” Then she giggled; a very scary
thing when it comes from Janine. “I bet you’ve gone
all this time saving the city with no thanks or reward…”
She put her arms around my neck. “I think I can think of something
for my new favorite prelate.”
Somehow, I
doubt I’ll have to depend on the shouts and waves of strangers
to help me keep my spirits up anymore. In your face, Infinity!
End
Who Is… The Whitecoat? |