seeming
unsurprised. “All right, son. It’s time for you to answer a few questions. Think very carefully before you reply.”
“Okay,” I said as Tia removed the strap. I rubbed my arm where I’d been pricked.
“How,” Prof said, “did you nd out where we were going to strike?
Who told you that Fortuity was our target?”
“Nobody told me.”
His expression grew dark. Beside him, Abraham raised an eyebrow and hefted his gun.
“No, really!” I said, sweating.
“Okay, so I heard from some people on the street that you might be in town.”
“We didn’t tell anyone our mark,” Abraham said. “Even if you knew we were here, how did you know the Epic we’d try to kill?”
“Well,” I said, “who else would you hit?”
“There are thousands of Epics in the city, son,” Prof said.
“Sure,” I replied. “But most are beneath your notice. You target High Epics, and there are only a few hundred of those in Newcago.
Among them, only a couple dozen have a prime invincibility—and y o u always pick someone with a prime invincibility.
“However, you also wouldn’t go after anyone too powerful or too in uential. You gure they’d be well protected. That rules out Nightwielder, Con ux,
and
Fire ght—pretty much Steelheart’s whole inner circle. It also rules out most of the burrow barons.
“That leaves about a dozen targets, and Fortuity was the worst of the lot. All Epics are murderers, but he’d killed the most innocents by a long shot. Plus, that twisted way he played with people’s entrails is exactly the sort of atrocity the Reckoners would want to stop.” I looked at them, nervous, then shrugged. “Like I said. Nobody had to tell me. It’s obvious who you’d end up picking.”
The small room grew silent.
“Ha!” said the sniper, who still stood by the doorway. “Lads and ladies, I think this means we might be getting a tad predictable.”
“What’s a prime invincibility?”
Tia asked.
“Sorry,” I said, realizing they wouldn’t know my terms. “It’s what I call an Epic power that renders conventional methods of assassination useless. You know, regeneration, impervious skin, precognition,
self-reincarnation,
that kind of thing.” A High Epic was someone who had one of those. I’d never heard of one who had two, fortunately.
“Let us pretend,” Prof said, “that you really did gure it out on your own. That still doesn’t explain how you knew where we’d spring our trap.”
“Fortuity always sees the plays at Spritz’s place on the rst Saturday of the month,” I said.
“And he always goes to look for amusement afterward. It’s the only reliable time when you’d nd him alone and in a mind-set where he could be baited into a trap.”
Prof glanced at Abraham, then at Tia. She shrugged. “I don’t know.”
“I think he’s telling the truth, Prof,” Megan said, her arms crossed, jacket open at the front.
Don’t … stare …, I had to remind myself.
Prof looked at her. “Why?”
“It makes sense,” she said. “If Steelheart had known who we were going to hit, he’d have had something more elaborate planned for us than one boy with a ri e.
Besides, Knees here did try to help.
Kind of.”
“I helped! You’d be dead if it weren’t for me. Tell her, Hardman.”
The Reckoners looked confused.
“Who?” Abraham asked.
“Hardman,” I said, pointing at the sniper by the door.
“My name’s Cody, kid,” he said, amused.
“Then where’s Hardman?” I asked. “Megan told me he was up above, watching with his ri e to …” I trailed off.
There never was a sniper up above,
I
realized. At least, not one speci cal y told to watch me. Megan had just said that to make me stay put.
Abraham laughed deeply. “Got caught by the old invisible sniper gag, eh? Had you kneeling there thinking you’d be shot any moment. Is that why she calls you Knees?”
I blushed.
“All right, son,” Prof said. “I’m going to be nice to you and pretend none of this ever happened. Once we’re out that door, I want you to count to a thousand really slowly. Then you can leave. If you try to follow us, I’ll shoot you.” He waved to the others.
“No, wait!” I said, reaching for him.
The other four each had a gun out in a ash, all pointed at my head.
I gulped, then lowered my hand.
“Wait, please,” I said a little more timidly. “I want to join you.”
“You want to what?” Tia asked.
“Join you,” I said. “That’s why I came today. I didn’t intend to get involved. I just wanted to apply.”
“We don’t exactly accept applications,” Abraham said.
Prof studied me.
“ H e was somewhat helpful,”
Megan said. “And I … will admit that he is a decent shot. Maybe we should take him on, Prof.”
Well, whatever else happened, I’d managed to impress her. That seemed almost as great a victory as taking down Fortuity.
Eventually Prof shook his head.
“We aren’t recruiting, son. Sorry.
We’re going to leave, and I don’t want to ever see you anywhere near one of our operations again— I don’t want to even get a hint of you being in the same town as us.
Stay in Newcago. After today’s mess, we won’t be coming back here for a long while.”
That seemed to settle it for all of them. Megan gave me a shrug, an almost apologetic one that seemed to indicate she’d said what she had as thanks for saving her from the thugs with the Uzis. The others gathered around Prof, joining him as he walked to the door.
I stood behind, feeling impotent and frustrated.
“You’re failing,” I said to them, my voice growing soft.
For some reason this made Prof hesitate. He glanced back at me, most of the others already out the door.
“You never go for the real targets,” I said bitterly. “You always pick the safe ones, like Fortuity. Epics you can isolate and kill. Monsters, yes, but relatively unimportant ones. Never the real monsters, the Epics who broke us and turned our nation to rubble.”
“We do what we can,” Prof said.
“Getting ourselves killed trying to take out an invincible Epic wouldn’t serve anyone.”
“Killing men like Fortuity won’t do much either,” I said. “There are too many of them, and if you keep picking targets like him, nobody’s going to worry about you. You’re only an annoyance. You can’t change the world that way.”
“We’re not trying to,” Prof said.
“We’re just killing Epics.”
“What would you have us do, lad?” Hardman—I mean, Cody— said, amused. “Take on Steelheart himself?”
“Yes,” I said fervently, stepping forward. “You want to change things, you want to make them afraid? He’s the one to attack!
Show them that nobody’s above our vengeance!”
Prof shook his head. He continued on his way, black lab coat rustling. “I made this decision years ago, son. We have to ght the battles we have a chance of winning.”
He walked out into the hallway.
I was left alone in the small room, the ashlight they’d left behind giving a cold glow to the steel chamber.
I had failed.
7
I stood in the still, quiet box of a room lit by the abandoned ashlight. It appeared to be running low on charge, but the steel walls re ected the dim light well.
No, I thought.
I strode from the room, heedless of the warnings. Let them shoot me.
Their retreating gures were backlit by their mobiles, a group of dark forms in the cramped hallway.
“Nobody else ghts,” I called after them. “Nobody else even tries! You’re the only ones left. If e v e n you’re scared of men like Steelheart, then how can anyone ever think any differently?”
The
Reckoners
continued
walking.
“Your work means something!” I yelled. “But it’s not enough! So long as the most powerful of the Epics consider themselves immune, nothing will change. So long as you leave
them
alone,
you’re
essentially proving what they’ve always said! That if an Epic is strong enough, he can take what he wants, do what he wants. You’re saying they deserve to rule.”
Steelheart (The Reckoners #1)
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