Villains Inc. (Wearing the Cape)

Chapter Eighteen

Many breakthroughs can bring firepower equivalent to military ordinance, making superhuman combat potentially very destructive, so

naturally after the Event insurance companies began offering new and enhanced lines of damage insurance. Superhuman Damage riders

have proven very profitable, since even in the big cities the insured’s chances of injury or property loss from superhuman combat

is low—and of course insurance company lawyers will sue to recover damages in cases where a superheroe’s negligence has added to

the damage. Which brings us to liability and the scope of superhero liability insurance.

A Harvard Law School colloquium text.

* * *



I remember being scared of doctors. Childhood cancer will do that to you, but somewhere in the last half-year Dr. Beth had stopped

being a source of dread. This time he gave me a compliment on the new costume along with the lollypop—the suit took a direct hit

and all it needed was some dry-cleaning, making me wonder what it was really made of.

My ribs were only fractured, which meant they’d be good in a couple of days. Vulcan called and asked me to come down to the lab

when I got out of the infirmary, so even though I reallyreally wanted to find Blackstone and Jacky, after changing I headed for

the Pit.

Vulcan's basement lab had serious security and containment, mostly because half of it was a clean-lab. Really clean; he could make

the polymorphic molecules he played with into anything, with whatever physical properties he wanted, but the slightest impurities

in the mix resulted in what Rush called “freaky shit.” Sometimes the FS was dangerous, which is why the lab included a plasma-

oven that could burn anything down to its constituent atoms in seconds; each of his reacting chambers could dump their contents

into the oven with the slap of a button. In an emergency he could seal and slag the entire lab. It made me nervous every time I

went down there.

I found Vulcan consulting with Rush. He had Rush's prosthetic hand off, poking its socket while the fingers flexed.

Rush's first prosthetic had been a simple cosmetic one, but when Vulcan joined the team he offered to replace it with a fully

functional cybernetic hand, cooking polymorphic molecules into artificial skeletal scaffolding, muscle mimickers, nerve chains,

and even skin wrap. He used the same Verne-science tech, minus the skin wrap since it got in the way of disassembly, to make

Galatea, and when he wasn't tinkering with her or making stuff for the team he donated his talents making customized prostheses

for amputees. Since nobody could duplicate his process, the waiting list was endless.

Galatea stood beside him with a tray of tools, still as a statue.

“Good afternoon, Astra,” she said when I stepped into the lab. “Are you well?”

The men looked up from the wiggling hand. Rush gave me the wary look he’d defaulted to since the events of January. He’d been

cleared of any charges by the DSA, but he’d gotten a lot more serious about things (though you couldn’t tell from the way he

acted in public). I’d heard Stacy had left him; what happened in Reno hadn’t become public knowledge, but he must have at least

told her. And he treated me carefully, even off the job.

But he’d saved my life today. We needed to talk, but not here. I set it aside and smiled at Galatea.

“Yes,” I said. “Thank you. And you?”

“I am operating within acceptable parameters.”

I laughed, looking her over. “‘I'm fine’ is a better way to say that.”

“Then I'm fine, thank you. May I ask why, when encountering a person, one is required to ask for a self-diagnosis?”

Rush snickered and I gave him a glare.

“It's a friendly salutation. If you want, you can comment on the weather instead.”

Vulcan looked alarmed, but Galatea nodded. “I have observed this, but there are too many variables in its usage for me to

confidently apply it at this time.”

“Astra,” Vulcan said before the impromptu session could continue. “Thanks for coming down.” His habitual saturnine expression

twisted in a smile.

He was the other reason I didn't like coming down here, but I smiled back. “You got Galatea back up fast.”

He waved it away. “She’s almost completely modular. I wanted to ask you about her seizure.” I looked at her.

“My memory for the period of the recursive error is unreadable,” she said.

“Oh.” I thought about those moments. “I think she froze after turning towards the civilians.”

“Hmm.” He frowned. “How many?”

“Half a dozen? More, with the police.”

“Damn. Too many imperatives.”

“English, Doc,” Rush said.

“Galatea isn’t a true AI, not really self-aware; she operates on a hierarchy of directives, imperatives, and protocols. One of

her main imperatives is to safeguard civilian lives, and when too many people were exposed to immanent mortality risk it triggered

a recursive error—she couldn’t choose.”

“That sucks.” Rush resocketed his hand, flexed it. “Can you fix her?”

“I doubt it. There are just too many variables in the field. I noticed decision-degradation during the godzilla attack, but it

stayed within parameters. It’s too bad; she’s a perfect disposable sensor platform and would make a great weapons platform too.



“She’s—” I stopped myself. It felt wrong, watching something that seemed human treated as a thing, but how could I get mad if

she didn’t?

Dispatch came to my rescue. “All Sentinels please report to the Assembly Room. All Sentinels…” Rush and I hit the door before

the announcement finished, Vulcan dithering behind us. He caught up to us before the elevator doors closed, but Galatea remained

behind, repacking instrument cases without ever looking up.

* * *



The Assembly Room actually felt crowded. The round table could seat fifteen, but with Blackstone and Lei Zi at the head, Chakra,

Artemis, Rush, Riptide, The Harlequin, Seven, Vulcan, and Dr. Cornelius and Orb, plus Detective Fisher sitting beside me, it was

close as Willis, with Tom’s help, worked his way around the table serving coffee.

It hadn’t felt this way the night before, when we’d mobilized to go after Dr. Millibrand. Had it really been just last night? I

looked over at Artemis. She hadn’t come out to the dealership—Lei Zi had grounded her until we knew how daylight affected her

powers.

“You good?” Fisher asked, leaning over.

I nodded. And why aren’t you in the hospital? I wanted to ask. I didn’t like secrets, and it sucked that my life was full of

them.

“Thank you all for coming,” Blackstone said, standing. “This won’t take long, but we felt this should be done together instead

of by Dispatch feed. First, we’re instituting Def-1.”

My stomach sank.

Riptide hadn’t memorized The Book yet. “Def-1?”

“Defense Position One,” Lei Zi said. “No contact with civilians outside of operations or on unsecured ground until further

notice. No going home, for those of you who’s primary residences are not in the Dome. No school attendance.” She looked at me.

“No physical contact with our families and friends until the situation resolves or we have reason to believe the threat is no

longer considerable.”

“Why?” Seven asked.

“We have been attacked,” Blackstone said. “It is my opinion that the fight at the dealership was set up for us. The obviously

superhuman murder naturally drew Detective Fisher’s team, and Astra, as the current CPD-CAI liaison. Once the first automaton’s

pick-ups verified Astra was on site, the second automaton was fielded. They configured it to kill Atlas-types.”

“Shit!” Rush swore. “This isn’t El Paso, what the hell is going on?”

“Who cares?” Riptide spat. “We know where this connorito is?”

“We know who he is,” Detective Fisher said. “But like Millibrand, he’s in the wind.”

“Who is he?” I actually managed to sound calm.

“Carl Mueler—they call him Tin Man. He can animate anything metal, but only one thing at a time. The robot and the dragon were

just armored puppets wired up for video and sound so he could control them from anywhere. Remote-controlled robbery is his thing,

and he went away to Detroit Supermax for eight years, got out last April.”

“Not a model product of Michigan’s wonderful corrections system, to be sure,” Blackstone said. “And obviously one of

Millibrand’s new associates.”

Rush stayed on-topic. “Who starts a war with us?”

“A good question,” Fisher said. “This new Villains Inc. is shooting every which way; killing Mr. Gerrold was a direct attack on

the Outfit, meant to send all sorts of messages. Other superhumans working for the Outfit have been put on notice, and the timing

means this new faction has inside intelligence; they knew about the meeting earlier today.”

“And the message for us?” Artemis asked.

He shrugged. “Back off.”

* * *



Fisher disappeared before I could talk to him, but what was I going to say? I think I saw you die? Did it hurt? I went back to my

rooms.

The attack was all over the news, so the first thing I did was lie to Mom and Dad. It’s easier to do by texting. Yes, there had

been a fight. I was fine. No, we didn’t know anything yet. The team was on alert, and wouldn’t stand down until Tin Man had been

caught. Since I was in uniform for the duration, home dinners and weekends were canceled. All true, to a given value of “true”—

and I hated it.

Stripping off my mask, I sat at my study desk to write up the after-action report, and tried not to obsess about my family.

Blackstone had promised to take their security to the next level in case the Wicked Witch wasn’t playing by the rules, which

meant unobtrusive Platoons were keeping them under observation. The next level up from there was retreat to a safe place like the

Dome.

So instead I brooded over not being able to hit every boutique and lunch-spot I knew with Jacky and the Bees (a complete wardrobe

rebuild for our new day-walker would make a great distraction for Annabeth). Then I found myself hung up on Fisher.

“Shelly?”

“Mmm?” She popped in, looking distracted.

“Can you get me Lieutenant Fisher’s medical report?”

“Which one?”

“Which—oh, from today. Someone must have checked him out after the fight, right?”

“Wrong.” She shook her head. “He wasn’t injured.”

I chewed my lip. I wanted to say I know what I saw, but did I really? Everything had happened so fast. “Shell?” I said slowly.

“You remember at the cabin, when you offered to replay your neural-linked recording of my and John’s getaway? Can you do that

for the attack today?”

Now she focused. “Are you sure?”

“Yes. Um, wait. Can you watch it? I don’t want to relive it—I just want you to tell me what happened to Fisher.”

“Sure.” She closed her eyes and covered her ears, humming the opening bars of If I Could Turn Back Time. Her eyes flew open.

“Jumpin’ thumps! That looked awful! And weird.”

I nodded, not happy. “I’d hoped it was a trick of my eyes.”

“Nope. Fisher’s spine bent ninety-seven degrees backward between the nineteenth and twentieth vertebrae. Then it didn’t.”

“What?”

“He hit the car, broke his back, and then he didn’t. I slow-mo’d it to look at each micro-sec and it’s like stop-motion

photography; one micro-sec he’s down, the next he’s down but fine. Then Rush grabs him and they’re gone. Hope? What’s going

on?”

Fisher had looked different in those weird moments in Mr. Moffat’s apartment, when Dr. Cornelius’ words had changed the world. I

’d forgotten about it, but if Cornelius’ spell had shown us what was really there, then had that been the “real” Fisher? And

what was he?

I sighed. “Can you discretely query the DSA database? Does Fisher have a file?”

“Yes, and no. But they wouldn’t know he was a breakthrough unless he’d registered himself to certify or done something to get

their attention.”

“What about his CPD file?”

“Nothing there, either, but…”

“What?”

“He’s never been sick—well, he’s taken some sick-days, but he doesn’t have a medical record. Never been injured or wounded,

either. And…Hope?” Now she sounded worried. “He doesn’t exist before he joined the CPD. I mean, he has a birth certificate,

school records, all that, but the hospital is fictitious. So are the schools. It’s all made up.”

My breath caught. He couldn’t be a fake. So he was a secret breakthrough, so what? Not every breakthrough went public or put on

tights and a mask. Lots of breakthrough powers were minor, lots weren’t super-heroic. Maybe his power just made him unkillable—

useful for a cop. I circled around the unthinkable; he could be a plant, an inside-man for the Outfit. They’d known to go after

Mr. Moffat, hadn’t they? And he could have tipped off Millibrand about the warrant…

But why make up a whole life? One that included schools that weren’t there?

I raised my head. “His background. Are any of those schools at the corner of Clark and Taylor?”

Her eyes widened. “No, but the fictitious children’s home is! But—what does that mean?”

“I don’t know! He was looking for the man who wasn’t there. We don’t have time for this!” I stood and stretched, testing my

ribs. Ouch-worthy, but getting better. I grabbed my mask.

“I’ve got to talk to Artemis. Shell…” I hate this. “I need you to break open every account Fisher has. If he works for the

Outfit, or somebody else, there’ll be a trail somewhere. Look everywhere he’s ever spent money. I don’t know, and we need to.”

Shelly nodded unhappily, and was gone.

When did I become a liar and a sneak? I forced myself to sit back down and finish my report, omitting Fisher’s undone injury,

found the CPD Incident Report number and appended it, and sent it on its way. Then I sat, looking at my mask, debating really

taking this to Artemis till she called me.

“Astra? You should get up to the Common Room.”

I knew that voice: pissed off and willing to share her pain.

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