A Shock to the System
by: Starbuck My thanks go to EnemyofFun for putting up with my s...l...o...w writing pace (and the loan of a couple characters), Solenthas for giving me awesome words to put in my villain's mouth, Lynceus for an important cameo and Lilith for sheer awesomeness.
|
![]() |
I'd been considering writing a Comic Retcon for a while. Many characters interested me but my lack of familiarity with comics was a bit of a damper, having been raised with either novels or the Tubesitter. My leading candidates were The Shadow, The Lone Ranger, and Static, my selection of a character was formalized in February when I came across the obituary for Dwayne McDuffie, creator of the character Static Shock. I realized that I wanted to do my Static stories as an homage to his creator, so this story is dedicated to the God of Static's universe...Dwayne McDuffie.
Prologue — Mom
The rattle and clatter of pans on the stove had always been a soothing sound for Virgil Hawkins. At ten years old, that sound coming from the kitchen told him all was well with the world. Alternatively, the simultaneous ringing of the house phone and the bleating of the pager his Mom had placed in a charger on the hall table were sounds to be dreaded.
“Virg. Be a dear and grab the phone for me,” Jean Hawkins called. “SHARON! I NEED YOU IN THE KITCHEN.”
Loud thumps crashed down the row-house stairs as Virgil's 14 year old sister stomped unhappily from her bedroom.
“Hawkins residence.”
“Virgil? Hey, it's Charlie, can I speak to your Mom?”
“Hang on, she's in the kitchen,” he said and then lay the receiver on the table.
“Okay Sharon, just stir the sauce occasionally. The noodles and garlic bread should be done in 10 minutes,” she looked over at Virgil. “It's my boss?”
Virgil nodded and followed her back into the hallway. The volume on the phone not loud enough that he could hear both ends of the conversation.
“Are you sure, Charlie?”
Jean looked around, seeing Virgil standing there. Looking at his face, her eyes teared up.
“Okay Charlie,” Jean sighed. “I'll be at the station in 15 minutes.”
Hanging up the phone, she steered Virgil into the kitchen. “Robert, Sharon. The station is calling in every available EMT. It looks like a gang fight has turned into a riot downtown.”
Kneeling she turned Virgil to face her. “I want you to finish your homework and be in bed by 9. Okay?”
The young boy smiled up at her. “Sure Mommy. You go be a hero!” Then he leaned in and gave her a sloppy, ten year old boy kiss.
Dinner had been very quiet, and the Hawkins children had followed their father into the den to watch the news. The hum of the television served as background noise to the two kids sitting at the coffee table doing their homework.
“In business news, ALVA Industries has formed a research alliance with LexCorp. ALVA Industries founder Edwin Alva had the following comment.”
“ALVA and LexCorp's areas of expertise have amazing potential to change human life for the better. By combining our research efforts, there is no limit to what we can accomplish.”
“And now we return to tonight's top story. Gang violence has turned into a riot in the city center.”
Knock. Knock. Knock.
Robert pulled himself out of his chair to answer the door. The knock repeating as he reached for the nob. At the door stood a uniformed police officer.
“Mr. Robert Hawkins?”
Virgil looked up as his father's tentative yes drifted back to him. His eyes locked briefly with those of the uniformed young woman. Years later, the look of sadness in her eyes would be one of his few clear memories of that evening.
“I'm Lieutenant Joletta Stewart, Detroit Metro Police.” Her eyes flicked over to the two children now staring at her from the den. “I... I'm afraid I have some bad news.”
Detroit: October 20th Present Day
Fifteen year old Virgil stared at his hands. Specifically, he stared at the Saturday night special that Wade had just placed there.
“Dude,” the gravel pit of Wade's voice drew Virgil's eyes upward. “I'm not gonna be there next time F-Stop decides to use you as a punching bag.”
Bile rose in the back of Virgil's throat. F-Stop was out there. Hell, every gang-banger in greater Detroit was in the warehouse district tonight. As gang-banger's went, Wade's crew wasn't so bad. They rumbled to protect the little guys in their turf, but if they protected you, even if you didn't ask them to, they expected payment.
Virgil's payment was to be here tonight.
Holding a gun.
“F-Stop is here,” Wade's deep voice growled. “You solve your problem.”
Loud metallic banging started up from the direction of the rail yard and Wade's crew faded into the shadows. Virgil looked again at the firearm in his hands. A gun. A gun at a major gang-fight.
“Mom!” The words escaped his lips as an anguished cry.
Tears filling his eyes, he ran half-blind to the end of the street, where it overlooked the river. Fighting down dry heaves, he threw the gun as far into the water as he could. The sounds of violent clashing rose above the background noise of the cool October evening, breaking free from amongst the buildings and the crates stored in open yards. Virgil started working his way back across the district. Maybe Wade's crew would accept that they saw him here and would not want anything more later.
Sirens screaming up from behind him caused Virgil to duck into a stack of crates bearing the Lexcorp logo. As the car roared by Virgil saw, illuminated by the headlights, a large mass of people brawling. Too involved in their fight to realize that the cops were coming, the violent noise seemed to intensify. The distressed cry of tire rubber reached his ears as the police car slammed to a stop and the two officers leaped out. Other cars were doing the same thing all around the periphery of the fight.
The senior officer on scene gave an order and a mix of tear-gas canisters and flash-bangs were launched into the melee. At first things seemed to be going exactly as the officer intended. The brawlers stopped under the onslaught of noise, light and gas. Then one of the flash-bangs went off underneath a mixed stack of LexCorp and Alva crates. The confined space giving the overgrown firecracker enough force to breach the container in the crate.
For a moment, the gas within merely leaked out, then it reached the smoldering remains of the flash-bang. The glowing ember ignited the gas causing the bottom crate to explode violently, breaching more containers all around. Some were flammable, like the first. Others were not, but those gasses mixed together to form something new and unexpected.
The explosions, the wind off the waterfront and the heavy weight of the gas drove it amongst the gang-bangers. The cops quickly retreated, digging out the masks they carried for protection against the tear gas.
Coughing, Virgil swam though the pinkish fog until he ran up against a chain-link fence.
“Skate park,” the teen muttered. “Yeah Dad, I went to the skate park with Richie after school.”
Richie had been planning this a long time. He knew he was good enough to pull it off without anyone being the wiser. Besides, he was really really good on his skates, so if someone wanted to be a problem, he could get away very quickly.
He heard sirens not too far away and smiled. One of the reasons he felt safe doing this tonight was because the Big Bang was supposed to draw all the bangers away from the skate park. He'd pretty much have it to himself. With a sliding stop he pulled up in front of a darkened window, admiring the vision he saw there. Inline skates, knee pads, elbow pads, helmet all were just the basics. What made the look complete was the long brunette wig, flawless makeup, long-sleeved dark green leotard, tights, and denim mini-skirt. His deep breathing causing the birdseed breast forms under the sports bra to dig at the skin of his chest.
“Hello Frieda,” he whispered to the window. “I've missed being you.”
Frieda was skying on the half-pipe under the argon-vapor lights when she saw the movement near the edge of the park. As expected, she was here alone, and enjoying herself immensely. With suspicion, she watched the dark figure move toward the benches, then fold up and collapse on the hard concrete.
The boy's collapse made her forget about the secret she had to hide. She forgot even that she had a secret as she skated over to the boy curled up on the ground. A pinkish miasma seemed to cling about the familiar figure as she knelt down to roll him onto his back. As Frieda saw his face, her voice broke.
“Virgil?”
Groggy, the young African-American teen looked around blindly. “Richie? I don't feel so good dude,” his eyes squinted. “Oh man, what was in that gas, you look like a girl.”
Reaching down, Frieda locked the wheels on her skates, helped her classmate to stand, slipped under his arm and started the long, slow walk to Virgil's house. With luck, she could get Virgil inside and into bed before Sharon or his father got home from the community center.
The pink gas seemed to cling to Virgil's clothes as Frieda struggled to keep him upright. Not content to merely cling about, it seemed to want to get in her face constantly too. She hoped it wasn't going to make her as punchy as it had clearly made her friend.
Chicago: Late November
Stress often does strange things to people, and when it does, those people seek out others who can understand and will help them. So much is said and shared in confidence that it is pretty much a given that every therapist is in therapy with someone else. Every therapist, that is, except her.
After years of training and active practice serving as the receptacle of other people's trivia and trauma, Harlene had come to the conclusion that 'Sanity' was both relative and highly over-rated. Even worse for her was the issue of morality, or rather her complete lack of intuitive internalization of the concept.
Sitting behind her desk, Harlene Quinzel, Doctor of Psychiatric Medicine let her eyes drift closed after the departure of her last whining sheep of the evening. She felt the itch building again in the base of her skull and the brilliant idea that flashed through her cortex nearly made her orgasm. Scrambling through the journals in the bin behind her desk she pulled out a recent one with an article detailing psychological issues in dealing with the new meta-humans.
Events in Detroit had made it a microcosm of the global meta situation and all the juicy details were there for exploitation. Impressionable kids, strange new powers, minimal qualms about criminal activity, insane glee overtook Harlene's features as the madness slipped to the fore.
“Oh, look at all the lonely metas.” Harley Quinn sang as she turned to her computer.
Detroit:3 ½ Months Post-Bang — February 10th - 11am
Turning the corner in the crowded hallway, Virgil spotted the mop of unruly blond hair trying to weave its way toward him. As the kid's hand raised above the crowd, Virgil's spine turned to ice and he quickly ducked into Ms. Bart's English classroom, sailing across the room and through the door that opened on the opposite hallway. Making a hard right, he hit the stairwell, banister sliding down to the first floor where he cut across the commons to the back corner stairs. The longer route had him running late and the back stairwell was empty by the time he hit the third floor landing. Or nearly so.
“Dammit Virgil,” Richie growled. “Stop avoiding me.”
Virgil swallowed the bile that rose in his throat. “Dude, I don't know you.”
“That is freaking obvious. But this isn't about me.” Richie glanced up and down the stairwell and out the little window in the door. Holding up a folded sheet of paper, he slapped it into Virgil's hands. “Static needs to look into this.”
Chicago: February 10th - 10pm
Virgil's fist closed around the paper, lifting the copy of the Sun to hide his face as he leaned against the wall of the Greyhound station. Bus 9947, one of their newer buses with the blue, 50's themed paint pulled up to the unloading area, the glowing Chicago in the upper side window flipping to read Detroit. Apparently, the company had them on a quick turn-around.
He continued to watch as the passengers milled around the side of the bus while the station staff began unloading their luggage. His position and the commotion almost caused him to miss the girl as she stepped out of the door and turned the opposite direction. Slipping around the corner of the building, he quickly reversed his coat and slipped the mask over his eyes. Tossing the mylar disc free of his pocket Static zapped it with a charge and then leaped into the air, drifting quietly above the buildings as he followed the teenager away from the bus station.
Static reviewed what he knew. Allie Langford. Sixteen. Cheerleader. Was dating a member of Wade's crew around mid October. His research had not indicated if she was present at the Big Bang, but the rumor was that she had recently begun showing signs of being a Bang Baby.
The explosion that night at the rumble had exposed a significant percentage of the kids in Detroit to the mutagenic gas. A half-dozen hard-core gang-bangers at the epicenter of the explosion had died immediately of exposure to the gas. Thirty more were institutionalized with powers that were completely out of control. Rumor had it that Homeland Security had contracted with LexCorp and spirited most of them away to some special facility in Nevada to work on a cure. That left no less than a hundred kids, like Virgil, who were far enough away from the explosion to not be overdosed on the gas. There were also rumors of secondary exposures among some friends and family members who had contact with the Bangers within the first few hours. Collectively, these new meta-humans were being referred to as Bang Babies, so as to distinguish them from the naturally occurring metas who had begun cropping up around the globe.
In spite of the cool powers, to be a meta in Detroit came with significant external baggage. People automatically assumed that you were a gang-banger, whether you were good, bad or indifferent. The stigma could be too much for some and they ran from society to hide their affliction, especially if it was difficult to hide the changes or powers that resulted from them. By the middle of November, dozens of families had moved from the Detroit area to places where their child's meta status would not be stigmatized by the gang association. But others couldn't or wouldn't leave. And then, there were the late emergences.
Static glanced down as Allie consulted a map she was carrying and turned up a dark side street. The thought of what she was going through brought back memories of the days immediately after the Big Bang.
Detroit: October 21st - 6am
Dim, blue light drifted through the curtains of the darkened bedroom. On the bed, the young teenager tossed and turned, lost in dreams that were half memory, half fear and all to be recalled only dimly under the light of day. Blue sparks merged with the dim lighting as he thrashed beneath the blankets. In the darkness he rolled to the edge of the twin bed where it met the wall. Briefly, the boy snored into the corner where the two surfaces met. After a moment, blue sparks crackled as he rolled again.
BEEP. BEEP. BEEP.
Reaching out, the boy slapped the wall.
BEEP. BEEP. BEEP.
“Maaallright.” He slapped the wall again and a blue spark jumped from his hand, hitting the alarm clock on the nightstand.
Sunlight peeked through the curtains, casting an orange line across the teen's face. Throwing an arm across his eyelids he rolled over, his other hand slapping against popcorn textured paint. Half asleep, a puzzled expression wrinkled his brow. Cracking open his eyes, he looked over to see his hand resting against the textured surface.
Closing his eyes, Virgil turned his head the other direction then opened them again. And closed them immediately.
“No way.”
He opened his eyes again and stared at the bed from his position two-thirds of the way up the bedroom wall. Five seconds later his face accelerated toward the mattress at 9.8 meters per second. Squared.
“Well, gravity works,” Virgil muttered.
“I was wondering for a second there,” Richie groaned from the sleeping bag tossed across the bedroom floor. “Have to admit it looked pretty cool though. Why didn't you tell me you got bit by a radioactive spider?”
Virgil sat up in the bed, throwing off the blanket that had fallen with him. “What are you Mmmphfff.” The blanket sailed back and wrapped itself around his head.
Richie laughed. “Okay, forget the spider, you got bit by a radioactive prankster.”
Blue sparks arced from Virgil's fingers as he wadded the blanket into a ball and stuffed it beneath the mattress. As they touched various things they began floating and swirling around the room. Before too long had passed, everything in the room that wasn't locked down was part of the brownian parade, including Richie's half-open backpack.
“Uh Virgil,” Richie's voice drifted down from near the ceiling. “I think calm is in order right now.”
Virgil looked over toward his best friend from where he was sitting indian style on the floating mattress. “Oh, I am calm, Richie.”
Richie dropped halfway to the floor in a hurry, stopped, rose again and then was set gently down on a floating desk chair. Everything in the room drifted slowly to a stop, landing where Virgil wanted it too. Everything except for a green leotard, tights, denim mini-skirt and a long, brunette wig. “Care to tell me which of the bullies forced you into this outfit last night?”
Chicago: February 10th — 10:30pm
Allie ducked into the deep shadows of the narrow street, pressed her back against the rough stone of the building's wall and suppressed a shiver. She had felt it since getting off the bus. It was the same skin-crawling sensation she got at school and occasionally elsewhere around Detroit. Someone was watching her.
With a low scrape from the metallic skin on her palms, she pushed off from the wall and sprinted down the dark alley. Stopping at the next corner she consulted the map she had not let out of her sight since printing it out in the school lab 13 hours earlier. Turning to her left she spotted the building she was looking for. On her map it was marked 'Rooftop at 11pm -Thalia'.
Thalia. Allie's one true friend through all of this. Thalia understood what she meant when she talked about her fears of being different. Thalia stood by her when everyone else turned away. Thalia refused to let her turn inward and hide from the world. Thalia was her hope, her help and her salvation.
She had been at the crib when Sly had stumbled in after the bang. Allie had ignored the pinkish vapor clinging to his clothing as she had helped him over to one of the cots. He had gotten out some weird story about an explosion at the gang fight and a gas that had changed a bunch of the bangers. While he was talking he'd started growing larger. When he started absorbing the cot Allie had screamed and then run from the gang's hideout. She had not gone back and had not seen any members of Wade's crew around school, except for Virgil, the kid they had been recruiting.
That was almost four months ago. Shortly after New Years, she had noticed a grayish patch of skin near her right elbow. Over the first week, the patch would disappear and reappear in different places. Then it multiplied and the various patches began to grow larger. By the end of the month, the change would come over her entire body. When it did, she was invulnerable. It could flash on in an instant if she was threatened or just come on randomly for no reason. When it came on it would stay for hours. Allie had taken to wearing long sleeve hoodies and jeans. She had quit the cheerleading squad, which had alienated her from her friends. And in a cycle of vicious feedback, the mutual snubbing had spiraled out of control until she had gone from one of the most popular girls in the school to a nobody. Through it all, she had the skin-crawling, electrical, tingly feeling of being watched.
In the midst of these changes, she'd turned to the internet seeking answers. That was where she had met Thalia. Thalia, who did not twist her own words back on her like knives. Thalia, who promised to help her, free her from this curse or failing that, to stand by her as a true friend should.
Now it was early February and she was running through the dark alleys of Chicago, hundreds of miles from home, with someone unseen following her. She reached the side of the building where she was supposed to meet Thalia. The doors and windows were all boarded shut and the fire escape looked ready to fall on her head. With a bit of brief concentration, the nails of her hands and feet grew outward.
“Okay Nails. Lets see whoever's back there follow this.”
Jabbing the steel spikes into the ancient mortar of the building she began to climb.
Detroit: February 10th - 1pm
Virgil stopped at the window beside the library door and checked his reflection. Suave smile, shoulders back, dreads flat.
“Whoa, woah no.” His hands came up and started teasing the dreadlocks back into their usual disarray. A quick glance around and a burst of electricity later. “Dreads should never be flat.”
A quick tug and the USS Virgil Hawkins sailed through the door into the library all spit and polish and gleam. “Afternoon Ms. Ficus.” He threw his signature down on the sheet for the computer lab. “Got a paper going and need some e-search time.”
The matronly librarian shook her head slowly. “Why is it always an entrance with you?”
“Positive attitude Ms. F! Pops is a firm believer that a positive attitude is the key to success!”
“I can't argue with a father who cares,” she smiled. “Let him know I'll be by the center next week to help out with the reading room.”
“Sure thing.” With a jaunty wave he floated through the doorway beside her desk into the library computer lab. With a click, the door latched behind him.
“Okay Richie,” his voice became serious as he addressed the only other person in the room while holding up the note. “Allie Langford's a Bang Baby and she's in trouble. You have my attention.”
“Remember... well... before,” Richie swallowed. I promised to put together a spider to track mentions of Bang Babies to help Static protect new emergees.”
Virgil nodded.
“Well, a promise is a promise. I got the code up and running last month.” Richie turned the computer screen around. “This morning I got multiple hits from this machine.”
A couple keystrokes brought up the school usage log for the equipment and the web history.
Virgil let out a low whistle. “Bang Baby Support Network. Even managed to get a .org meta-tag for it instead of a .com. How come we haven't heard of this site before?”
“Because it's only been in existence for a couple weeks.” Richie typed rapidly on the keyboard and the screen dissolved into lines of letters, numbers and characters. Mousing over a section, he highlighted a string of numbers. “That's the address of a low-rent server farm in Eastern Europe. I'll tell you right now that nothing good has ever been hosted there.”
“So we've got an Eastern European crime syndicate trying to lure Bang Babies?”
“No, we have an Eastern European crime syndicate selling webspace to someone in Chicago who's trying to lure Bang Babies. Someone going by the name of Thalia. Allie Langford has been using this machine to communicate with this Thalia and they want her to meet them.” Richie looked up at his former friend. “Tonight.”
Silence filled the room as the lanky, blond haired teen sent the information to the printer.
Chicago: February 20th — 10:50pm
The orange glow of streetlights reflected dimly off the thin clouds obscuring the night sky, light pollution from the sprawling city washing out even the near-full moon. The watcher lurked in the deep shadows of the rooftops, using the forest of antennas, chimneys and vent pipes to hide her silhouette. The black trench coat was intended to help with that, swirling in the darkness, leaving only an impression of deeper darkness when still or distracting misdirection when in motion. It also kept the dirt off of her black leather pants and a thin, dark gray hoodie, custom tailored of course. For the stakeout, she had chosen soft-soled boots. She felt naked without her costume on, particularly the hood. However, it would have made her too obvious due to the publicly busy hour at which she'd hauled the stakeout gear to the rooftop. Shivering in the February chill, she slipped the hoodie up to cover her blonde hair and lifted the collar of the trench to block the breeze.
In the darkness behind the building's elevator machinery, the dark figure took a moment to check the equipment she had assembled an hour previous. The parabolic microphone and the video camera had both been aimed down at the neighboring roof and were recording to a custom computer box on the graveled tar beneath them. The box in turn, was transmitting its data with a mil-spec encryption routine to a secure server that only she and one other had the access codes for and location of.
Her partner had come across the thief's latest lure as a result of one of her automated search routines. The website's security had been amateur and she was able to quickly amass significant information on the mechanics of her plan. In underworld circles she went by Harlequin, they suspected who the target was, but until they had enough hard evidence to provide to their contact in the Police Department, there was little that could be done openly against a notable local psychiatrist. At least not without revealing their own secrets. She was an opponent of many skills who's plots interwove in maddening ways. The villainess' twisted schemes often landed her lackeys in hot water while she escaped amidst a pandemonium of laughter. Her sudden interest in the Detroit Bang Babies was disturbing on many levels.
Was Harlequin plotting some new caper with a need for heavier muscle and a plan to abandon them to the system's tender mercies? Or was the thief assembling a more permanent force that she would be hard pressed to counter on her own? The watcher knew a few of the new metas whom she might be able to call on if stopping the thief called for more muscle, some were even pretty good, but they were all, like her, young. Only one that she was aware of professed any significant police training, and according to her latest information, she was out of the country. The others would be good for a fight, but any evidence would likely be ruined. Her mind flashed to the 'admissibility of evidence' criteria that were spelled out in the latest text her partner had foisted upon her. Tonight's take was probably borderline, but hopefully it would lead to something that was more solidly usable.
Crouching at the edge of the roof, footfalls in the alley below broke the dark figure from her ruminations. The watcher reached to her coat pocket, pulling out a pair of heavy rimmed glasses and slipped them on, inserting the earplugs that were attached to the backs of the arms. Slipping the phone off her belt, she called up the custom app for the gear she and her partner had assembled. After activating the bluetooth camera, she logged the feed onto her partner's account. Fingering a control on the phone, she increased the gain on the directional microphones attached along the arms of the glasses. Slowly turning and tilting her head, she aimed the 'ears', pinpointing the sounds at the base of the opposing building..
“Okay Nails. Lets see whoever's back there follow this.” She heard the high clear voice of a girl mutter quietly.
A metallic shick noise was soon followed by a series of scraping of metal on brickwork sounds. In the far background was a low buzz, like a transformer under heavy usage. Reaching in her pocket the watcher pulled out a pair of low profile night vision goggles and clipped them to the magnetic linkage on the front of her glasses. Hitting the power automatically activated the blue-tooth link to her smartphone, sending the feed from the infra-red goggles back to her partner as well.
The watcher was impressed. Whoever this Nails was, she climbed the sheer wall without any special equipment. The girl was also nearly invisible to the infra-red goggles, her body appearing the same ambient temperature as the surroundings. She watched the cold, dark figure climb higher, the sparks and friction heating from driving the spikes in the wall marking her passage. She could see that the spikes seemed to extend directly from the tips of the girl's fingers and toes as she would drive each hand higher, then lift her legs, driving the toes and then standing up to raise her arms again. As the climber rolled over the lip of the roof and was silhouetted against the other buildings, the watcher could make out the petite form of a teenage girl.
Through the girl's entire climb, the buzzing noise had been getting louder in the watcher's ears. Shaking her head, the dark figure wondered if the buzz had something to do with the girl's ability to blend into the thermal background.
Suddenly, a blinding light washed out the night vision system leaving sparkling blue motes dancing before the watcher's eyes. Moments later, her ears were left ringing as a deafening teen male voice shouted from directly above her.
“Allie Langford!”
“Static!” Disdain dripped from Allie's lips as she spun to face the teen hero. The proximity of of his electrical field causing the girl's metallic skin to shiver. “So it's been you. Bad 'nuff you follow me all over Detroit but to Chicago too?”
All the grandiose speeches he had prepared flew out the window with the girl's opening volley. Luckily his high end mental skills did not leave him completely and he was able to enunciate a deeply articulate response. “Huh?”
“Eloquent,” Allie snarked. “I thought you were the master of the snappy patter?”
“I haven't been following you,” Virgil managed to find his tongue.
“So you say!” Allie rolled her shoulders. “I have a metal skin-crawling itch that says different.”
“Allie.”
“There ain't no Allie. I'm Nails.”
Virgil shook his head sadly. “Listen Allie, your friends back home are worried about you.”
“I said. The name. Is. Nails! And I ain't got no friends.”
“This isn't like you Allie.”
“And who are you to know what I am like?”
“You're smart, popular, a cheerleader, people care about you.”
“Oh yeah, I'm popular all right. You know what my friends did when they found out I was changing? My friends cut me out of every single thing that we used to do together. You know why?
“Because you're a bang baby.”
“NO! Because everyone in Detroit knows that all the Bang Baby's are Gang-bangers.”
“I feel you there sister...”
“SISTER! Don't you sister me you spark-shooting, pajama wearing FREAK! What would mister media darling supa-he-row know about my pain? Let me tell you about my pain!”
“Allie...”
“Shut up mask boy! Hiding your identity! I bet your so-called real friends don't even know about your powers. You can hide in plain sight and be normal.” The metallic ring of her knuckles rapping against her arm echoed off the buildings. “When I couldn't hide it any more, I told my friends. Every single one of them turned their back on me. Ooooh it was sooo cool for them when I was dating a member of Wade's crew, but me changing. Hell no, they wasn't gonna tolerate a gang-girl hangin with their crowd. You know what really gets me pissed off though. Someone seems to have told my crew before I did. When I look back, I see them shying away from me even before this change became noticeable.
“Every time I looked at them, I could see the loathing in their eyes. Oh, they'd deny when I called them on it. It's like they were afraid it was going to rub off on them and they'd be infected too. HA!”
“I know that can't all be true Allie. Your parents...”
“My parents are so embarrassed about my change that they are planning to move out of Detroit! Do you know how bad it looks for a hot shot Lawyer and an up and coming surgeon to have a Daughter who's a gang-banger?”
“You're not a gang-banger Allie.”
“Oh yeah?.” Allie clenched her fists and thrust the both up in front of her. “Well this here seems to say different!
“Fine!” Virgil let his temper slip in frustration. “That's still no reason for you to take off to join up with this Thalia stranger you met through a website.”
Fire lit up in Allie's eyes and her metallic skin seemed to darken. “How. Do. You. Know. About. HER!!! Oh no, it's not enough for you to follow me across three states. No, you have to go and snoop in my personal stuff too.
“I have had it with this crap,” Allies hands snapped open, pointing straight down beside her hips, the nails growing several inches long. “And I have had it with YOU!”
A snap of her wrists sent ten metal daggers zipping through the intervening space between the two of them, leaving Static barely a moment to bend their flightpath to avoid becoming a pin cushion. He felt the tug as several of them passed through the material of his coat. Concentrating, he focused on the nails and curved their flightpath around, launching them back toward where the girl had been standing.
“That's not going to work Allie.”
“But this might!” Her growling voice came from directly beneath him.
Leaping, the metal girl latched her fingers around the young hero's ankle, her weight dragging him down off of his hover-disc. “Tell me Static, what happens when a charge goes to ground?” Reaching a leg out, she hooked a foot around the base of a rooftop lighting rod.
A brilliant flash lit up the skyline and the crash of thunder echoed and re-echoed off the surrounding skyscrapers. The sudden flow of energy blasting the two antagonists away from each other. Virgil found himself slumped against the brick parapet of the building, the sound of maniacal laughter rising dimly above the ringing in his ears.
“Oh, bravo Sparky!” The strange sight of a lithe, female jester swam across his vision. “However, I'm afraid you've come up a bit short tonight.”
Virgil groaned as the nutcase leaned her greasepaint covered face in close to his. Sideways. The jingling bells of her jester-cap ringing on either side of his head. Violent, stabbing pains raced inward from all of his extremities, only to collide and begin fighting for priority to reach his brain. Like a sprawling movie brawl, the conflict spread and soon a splitting headache joined the litany of his ails.
“Hey! I like you Sparky.” She did a slow backflip and perched on a roof-vent staring at him. “Of course I also like cats as well. And Dachshunds. Ooo, but I hate Chihuahuas. If I could turn the moon into some kind of chihuahua magnet that made them fly off into the sky, it would be done. Can you do that? I'll take you ohm with me if you'll do that!”
“Who are y-you supposed t-to be?” Allie's shaky voice rose from the other side of the roof.
The jester rolled backward off the vent into a handstand. “Why Nails, surely I thought you'd recognize your partner in commiseration. But perhaps not.” The handstand folded into a tuck-roll that brought the jester up beside the girl.
“I'm such a romantic that some in our dear gotham here call me Harlequin.” The jester clasped her hands dramatically to her bosom as she spun away. “But you my dear. You know me as the muse of comedy.”
“Thalia.”
“The one and only!” Harlequin bowed deeply, falling into a roll that left her sitting at Allie's feet staring upward with her legs spread wide. “At least until that bunch of warrior priestess wannabes north of downtown wise up and catch a sense of humor.”
Rolling to her feet, Harlequin danced lightly across the roof to where Static was just beginning to get control over the violent shaking in his limbs. Kneeling beside his ear she glanced back at Allie and winked. “Confidentially,” she stage whispered. “I'm Xena-phobic.”
With that, she cracked open a phial under his nose, letting him inhale the gas.
“Beddy-bye time Sparky,” she patted his head. “The offer still stands if you can get rid of the chihuahuas.”
The watcher ripped the glasses from her eyes as soon as the clown had lead the teenager off the roof. Raising the phone to her ear, she growled into the microphone. “Tell me we got what we needed.”
“We got enough. Pack up our gear and get out of there.”
“Not until I check on the hero.”
“I've already called in a favor. He'll be looked after.”
“He might be dead.”
“Then there's no point in messing up the crime scene.”
“NOT going to happen,” the girl snapped as she turned off the phone and crammed it into her pocket.
Ignoring the vibrating phone, she took a run at the gap between the rooftops, sailing over the alley in a clean leap, landing on her feet and then jogging to a smooth stop beside the blue-coated hero. Kneeling, she quickly checked his pulse and breathing, confirming that he would be okay.
Her curiosity sated, she stood to return to her gear then paused and knelt beside him again. This time she rifled through his pockets. Pulling out a cell phone she flipped it open, scrolled through the menu and noted down the number. Checking his other pockets she came up with his wallet, flipping it open she chuckled and jotted down the information there as well. Replacing his phone and wallet in their pockets she stood again.
The phone in her pocket resumed its buzzing. Fishing it out she thumbed it on and raised it to her ear.
“Satisfied?”
“Yes.” She turned and stared at the camera, invisible among the shadows on the other rooftop. “Tell your friend that the hero is breathing easy. Harlequin appears to have used a knock-out gas on him.”
“Anything else?”
“Yeah! It's damn cold out here. I'm RTB. Out.”
“When I look back, I see them shying away from me even before this change became noticeable.”
Virgil sat at the table in the High School cafeteria, idly pushing lumps of mystery meat around the nearly untouched bowl on his tray. Vaguely pea-like spheres swirled among orange disks that might have been carrots swimming in the thin gruel the school dietician's called lunch. It was three days now since the Big Bang. Virgil now knew how different he was and how much of an outsider that could make him if he let it. As he contemplated this, he looked up to see Richie in line for food. Richie, who's revelations that night were almost as shocking as the change Virgil had undergone.
He'd never noticed before, but now as Richie crossed the cafeteria, little things jumped out at him. The set of his hands holding the tray, the smooth way he walked, swaying his body to gracefully avoid the obstacles. Richie moved, stood and held himself more like a girl than a guy. How had he not noticed that before?
Richie's arrival at the table seemed to twist something inside of him. Staring at the bowl of stew, what little appetite Virgil had, left him. The need to be somewhere else overcame him and he rose. “I need to get something from the library...”
The clown killed the lights and turned down a tight alley that ended at an open roll up door. With a bump, the car crossed the threshold, the tone of the engine changing to reflect the enclosed space. “Well Nails, we're home.”
Allie slipped the sleep mask off her face and looked around. Dim lighting illuminated several parked vehicles. Her friend pulled their sedan up between a sleek sports car and an armored behemoth. A Lincoln stretch limo sat opposite them.
The confrontation with Static still bothering her, Allie quietly followed Harley to the cage elevator that rose at the far end of the garage.
“First floor,” Harley sang. “Hardware, transportation, tires.”
Ding.
“Second floor, minions, servants and sycophants.”
Ding.
“Third floor, weapons ranges and armory. Remember, when you set up your own lair, minions and mortars are fine, but sycophants and shotguns do not mix.”
Ding.
“Shut up mask boy! Hiding your identity! I bet your so-called real friends don't even know about your powers.”
“Dude, you gotta have a costume,” Richie was nearly bouncing as he straddled the desk chair. “By the way, I started work on the search spider we discussed.”
“Tell me again, oh great and powerful Oz, why a costume is so important?”
“Virgil, Virgil.” Richie shook his head. “Think about it. Even if you didn't want to be a hero, what if you needed to use your powers? What if someone saw you? Word would be out, mess with Sharon or Pops and Virgil's yours. Face it, you're vulnerable.”
“Seriously Richie?”
“Hey, I'm not the non-gang-member who got gassed at the gang-fight.”
Virgil sighed and slumped his shoulders. “Well then, what were you thinking?”
“I stopped by the Goodwill on the way over.”
An involuntary shiver shot down Virgil's spine as Richie dove into the backpack and started pulling out clothing.
“Y...you're not planning on dressing me up as a girl, are you?”
“Well, it would be a disguise!” Richie looked thoughtful for a moment. “Of course, the bad guys would be gone by the time you got your makeup done.”
Ding.
“Tenth floor. Teens, petites, ladies, lingerie and hyenas.”
Allie snorted as she stifled the laugh. “Hyenas?”
Harley turned to her and winked. As she reached to open the elevator cage the sound of clicking nails and high pitched giggles came from outside the door. Bright light flooded into the dim gray box and a tawny blur of motion caught her vision briefly before a mad cackle of laughter exploded beside her and Harley dove into the swirling mass of fur.
“Thalia?”
~~~***~~~
“Every time I looked at them, I could see the loathing in their eyes. Oh, they'd deny when I called them on it. It's like they were afraid it was going to rub off on them and they'd be infected too.”
The red light behind the figure slowly built in intensity then faded. Repeating with a metronomic implacability. The light would come on. The light would go off. Light, dark, light, dark. High atop the western tower of the Ambassador Bridge cold wind swirled around the under-dressed female figure. Mournfully, she gazed out over the lights of the two cities the bridge connected.
She took a step closer to the edge, looking at the water 390 feet below.
Bright light flared. “Richie, what do you think you're doing?” Static hovered several feet in front of the boy in girl's clothing.
“I'm doing what you want me to do Virgil. I'm going away so you can't catch what I have.”
“Richie, I know I can't catch that.”
“Are you really sure of that Virgil?”
Things suddenly felt breezy around his knees. Looking down, Virgil saw that his jeans had become a denim skirt that swirled in the wind and static electricity.
“See. It is contagious.” Richie shuffled closer to the edge.
“Richie...”
“Don't Virgil.” Fury lit Frieda's eyes as she stepped to the very edge of the drop. “If you can't call me by my true name, then don't.”
Leaping forward, she plowed into Virgil, knocking him off balance. With a kick, she wiggled free of him and arched into a dive, falling away from the hero. Righting himself, he turned and dove after his best friend. As they passed the road deck, he managed to wrap a hand around one of Richie's ankles, but as he pulled back, a sickening, slippery feeling coursed through him as the male Richie's skin peeled away, leaving a fully female Frieda falling naked toward the water below.
Virgil dove faster, knowing it was too late. “NOOOOOO! FRIEDA!!!”
At the sound of her name, she turned back toward him and smiled. Then the cold, dark water swallowed her.
Virgil slammed back first into the hard marble floor, eyes staring at the dimly lit acoustical tile ceiling.
“Frieda.”
The long day had begun catching up with Allie while she was still in the car. With a luxurious stretch she slipped onto one of the leather sofas while Harley romped with her pets. Letting her eyes drift closed she started to snuggle into the cushions, only to be interrupted by the lick of a cold, wet tongue against her cheek. Keeping her eyes closed she lifted a hand to push the hyena away from her, only to stop suddenly, her hand frozen against distinctly non canine features.
Laughter rang in her ears as the mad clown danced away from the sofa. “No time to be a sleepy-head Nailsey, we've got a job to do!” With a shrill whistle, the hyenas all rushed to the open elevator.
“Wha...” Allie tried to shake her head clear. “What are you talking about?”
“Why work, silly! Psychiatry and meta-human cures don't come cheap you know!” The insane patter dropped to a tone of deadly earnestness. “And I insist on payment in advance.”
With a quick tug, Frank checked the locked gate separating the African exhibit from the main hall of the museum. Budget cuts had come down from the board of governors and his former partner had never been replaced. The museum's security technology had been upgraded and now, the night guard position was a vestigial requirement of the standing insurance policy. Frank didn't mind, but on some nights, he missed talking sports with Mike.
The echo of his tug on the gate died away to be replaced by the tap of his highly polished uniform shoes. The taps echoing off the vaulted ceilings, glass cases, and concrete walls. Tap... tap... tap... tapclick... tapclickclick...
Frank froze. Turning slowly as he shined his light back down the open display hall.
Click... Frank spun to his left. Clickclick... He snapped the light back to the right.
Reaching up, he keyed his mic. “Joe? Joe it's Frank. You there?”
No answer.
“Control? Frank on one. Something's odd and I can't raise Joe.” A cold shiver went up Frank's spine. “Control?”
Clickclickclickclickhehehehehehehehehehehehehehehehehehe
Frank spun toward the sound of the giggles, his flashlight illuminating the glowing orange retina's of the pack of hyena's bearing down on him. They hit like a run-a-way freight train, bowling the guard off of his feet. The momentum of the hit spun him away from the canines and he fetched up against a wooden door. Not waiting for the animals to come at him again he reached up and twisted the knob, backpedaling through the opening and slamming the door as the creatures managed to recover their footing on the marble and charge towards him again. He released his held breath at their thud against the solid door.
Reaching up he locked the doorknob. As he used it to stand, his other hand brushed against a deadbolt and he threw that in place as well. To the left of the deadbolt his hands found the light switch on the wall. Flipping it on he saw a third lock on the inside of the door and he slammed it home as well before taking in the pink floral décor of the first floor VIP women's washroom. With second thoughts he reached out, turning off the light. In the darkness he backed toward the couch in the corner while reaching for the mace can that hung with his keys.
The mace can was gone, as were the keys. His hands snapped to his belt where the spare mace hung and he relaxed as his hand touched the pouch. Then the dangling rubber end of his microphone's cord brushed against the back of his hand. Reaching to his hip, he found the radio missing from its holster and nearly screamed in frustration. Throwing his hands up, he let them fall, his right hand landing against the hard object deep in his pants pocket.
Chicago — February 21st — 3:30am
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven... “Uuuughhhh.” Virgil gave up on recreating Descarte's higher math experiments and forced himself to sit up. Turning, he let his legs dangle over the edge of the... counter. Generating a spark between his fingers he was able to make out the antiquated features of an abandoned diner.
As he slipped off the counter, the phone in his vest pocket began buzzing. Glancing at his watch he noted the time was 1am. Pulling out the phone, he glanced at the caller ID on the screen but didn't recognize it. Expecting a serious wrong number, he finally decided to answer it.
“Hello?”
“Static? About time you woke up.” A mechanically distorted voice replied. “You're almost late.”
Virgil began scanning the room for possible threats. “Who is this?”
A friend, the text to speech voice replied as the words of the message scrolled onto his cell phone's screen.
“My friends have names,” Virgil challenged. “And I'm not calling you Mister Rhee.”
The phone buzzed as the new message scrolled onscreen without activating the translator. Very well, for tonight, I am your oracle. Tomorrow, who knows.
With extreme caution, Virgil made his way toward the twin, swinging, metal doors and peering into the kitchen area. “Okay Mister Oracle, what do you want.”
It's not what I want, it is what you need. Yes or no. You came to Chicago to prevent a friend from making a very serious mistake.
“Yes.”
Harlequin is using Nails' abilities to help her rob the Field Museum. Police and other assets are already on their way there. You need to get there first and get your friend out of there before she makes that big mistake.
Virgil swallowed hard and began moving toward the front door of the diner. “You say this is happening now. How do I know your information is accurate?”
Wonders Virgil Ovid Hawkins, Dakota Union High School Sophomore, costumed crime-fighter.
“Maybe you really are as good as you claim to be.”
Maybe you shouldn't carry your school ID when you're in uniform.
Virgil winced. Fishing his bluetooth headset out of a pocket, he slipped it over his right ear and pocketed the phone.
“Point taken. Obviously, you are party to where I woke up,” Virgil said as he zapped the front door of the diner. Charging his mylar disc the teen hero flew through the opening. “Turn that speech synthesizer back on and tell me oh great and powerful Ozicle, how do I get there from here?”
Things were wrong. Bad wrong. Worse than wrong, wrong.
Allie slunk down the corridor behind the clown-faced ne'er-do-well. How the hell had she gotten here? Harlequin's minions had scattered throughout the museum. Disappearing from sight immediately upon their entry. Only the whimpery giggles from the hyena's could be heard in the oppressive silence. Their hunting sounds echoing off the cold stone, coming at her ears from unexpected directions.
The eerie oppression of the atmosphere was well suited to the mood of her thoughts.
I didn't come to Chicago to be a criminal. Hell, if I didn't do that, I sure as blazes didn't come here to be some two-bit criminal's lackey!
The hyenas came scrambling around the corner, slipping on the slick marble floor. Their alpha running up to Harley and dropping a jangly set of keys into her open palm. The sound of crunching plastic came from the other two. Looking in that direction, she could see them fighting over what appeared to be a walkie-talkie. Their efforts shattering the case and crushing the delicate electronic interior. After a quick pat on the head, the alpha turned and joined its pack in masticating the night-guard's radio.
Allie could feel her skin hardening. The damn meta-infection, as she considered it, always got stronger when she was angry. And now, her anger was bordering on that of the righteous. She came here to someone she thought was a friend. Someone she thought wanted to help her. Someone who said she knew a cure for her malady. Instead, she found the same type of loser users she dealt with back home. The whole situation reeked and the more it stank, the more pissed she got, until she was mad enough to spit nails.
Harley danced over to a locked metal security grate, jingling the keys as she tried various ones until the lock fell open and she was able to slide back the fencing separating them from the Africa exhibit. “Time to pay for that cure Nailsey! Fetch me the statue of the Golden Jackal and all your dreams of normalcy will come true.”
“OH NO you did NOT just tell me to FETCH!”
Cavalry sabers grew from her fingertips as Nails turned and advanced on the clown. Sensing a threat to their mistress, the hyena's charged at Allie, only to be turned aside by a casual sweep of her hands that sent them sliding and whimpering to the far end of the main hall. Turning, Allie marched towards the villainess, the heavy metal clang of her feet striking the marble floor echoing through the entire building.
“I did NOT come to this town to become a criminal! I did NOT come to this town to be anyone's lackey! And I most assuredly did NOT come to this town to FETCH for some clown-faced bitch with delusions of sanity!”
Harley giggled nervously. “Allie, I'm sorry. We moved too fast. You have anger management issues. I can wo...” The cold solidity of a stone wall at her back and the sudden presence of a razor sharp metallic talon at her throat cut off her attempts at speech.
“Not another word clown-bitch,” Allie growled. “I should drive this nail through your throat for what you tried to turn me into.”
“I wouldn't recommend that,” spoke a deep male voice behind her. “Mistress Harlequin made clear that if you weren't with us, you were expendable.”
The back of her neck began to tingle as the immediate clicks of automatic weapons being cocked came from the surrounding crowd of Harley's minions.
Oracle's directions got Static to the museum ahead of the first police cars. Swooping low over the roof, Virgil jogged off of the mylar disk, collapsing and stuffing it into his pocket. Peering down through the skylight, he could just make out movement on the ground floor. As quietly as possible, he jogged over to the roof access. Feeding a shot of voltage into latch, the door sprang open and he slipped inside.
Grinding down the rails in the stairwell, he pulled to a stop at the door to the uppermost mezzanine level. Stepping through the door, he clearly heard Allie's outraged confrontation with the shyster who had lured her here. Relief colored his step as, like a ghost, he glided along the upper balcony. By the sound of things, he no longer had to convince Allie not to take up a life of crime.
Then he heard the deep voice of Harlequin's lieutenant followed by the unmistakeable metallic sounds of weapons being brought to the ready.
Guns.
He hated guns.
A gun had taken his mother away from him.
Holding a gun just once told him more than enough to know that there were certain people who should never be allowed to have them.
Foremost among them.
Criminals.
Allie was tough, but Virgil had no idea if her metal skin was bulletproof. That uncertainty drew at his mind. He watched as she turned to face Harlequin's lackeys while keeping one bladed hand at the villainess' throat.
Virgil reached deep into his power, controlling it in ways he had not previously stretched to achieve. He felt it brush against Allie and he pulled it away from her. Instead, he focused it on the metallic objects that the clown's minions were pointing at her. Reaching out his hand, he grabbed the field lines he had woven with his power.
“You do know that it is not polite to point weapons at a lady!” Static quipped as he yanked the guns out of the criminal's hands, pushed them together and arc-welded the barrels together. A few bends, a twist, and he dropped the now vaguely plow-shaped, yet useless, mass in the midst of the black clad muscle.
Harley's lieutenant looked briefly at his now empty hands then sneered at the gray-skinned girl who still held a blade at his employer's throat. With a growl, he charged. In Nail's momentary hesitation, Harlequin slipped out from between the blade and the wall, punching, chopping and kicking at the steel-skinned teen as she did so. Back-flipping free of the developing melee, Harlequin spun a pirouette atop one of the gallery benches.
“Well, if it isn't Kid Kilowatt,” she drawled. “Patron scourge of the machine dried laundry.”
Virgil leaped onto a bench beside the rail. “Ha. Ha. It seems the clown princess of crime has forgotten that one should never come unarmed to a battle of wits!”
A rush of footfalls on the marble floor drew his attention. As he turned, a black-clad minion lowered his shoulder, ramming it into Virgil's stomach and driving the two of them into the glass rail, which shattered under the impact.
Allie dropped into a split as the man in front of her threw punches at her face. Hitting the ground she swiftly rolled to her stomach, scissoring her legs through those of the guy she had just ducked. Spinning on her hands in a move her former boyfriend had shown her, she raised her legs into the air, clearing a space around her then sprang off her arms and back to her feet. Sliding into a forward karate stance she smoothly transitioned straight into a sweeping kick that launched Harley's Lieutenant backwards, where he landed on two of her other minions.
The crash of breaking glass drew her attention. The fight paused as everyone turned to watch the two figures falling from the upper balcony. The pair twisted through the air, surrounded by a glittering rain of glass. As they neared the floor Static threw his blue, glowing hands behind him, his fall slowing under the influence of his power. With a meaty thud, the hero hit the floor, his opponent landing across his chest a moment later.
Light glinted off the red and black leather of Harley's outfit, the white face paint giving her head a disembodied appearance in the darkness of the museum. “Ooo. Sparky fall down and go BOOM!”
Allie ducked another punch, launching into a gymnastic series of springs and tumbles punctuated by moments of intense violence as she landed steel hard punches and kicks on those who attempted to engage her. Sliding to a stop, she yanked the unconscious minion off top of Static and flung him to the side.
“Metro one one seven two,” Static groaned.
“What?!” Nails hissed as she turned to face the advancing goons.
“The bus that hit me,” he rasped. “Metro 1-1-7-2.”
Nails reached down, grabbed Virgil's arm and pulled him upright, holding him steady as he struggled to get his feet under him.
“Hey Nails,” Virgil coughed. “We should get out of here before this gets any further out of hand.”
He watched Allie's eyes scan the room and lock on the Harlequin. “Not until I've settled my score with the user.”
The young hero took her firmly by the arm. “You already have Allie. You refused her.”
“But...”
“No buts. We go back to Detroit and make sure that she can never run this scam again on any of the bang babies there. But to do that, we need to leave now.”
Cackling laughter echoed through the atrium. "So sweet, but too late Kid Kilowatt. I'm one step ahead of the game." Harlequin's goons formed a circle around them, staying out of the girl's reach. Several of them were now sporting swords and other assorted weapons from one of the exhibit halls.
“Oh, ouch! I think you've just broken the first rule of improv,” Virgil snarked. “Never repeat a line. And as to your goons stopping us from leaving? I don't think so sister, cause me and my home-girl are busting through.”
With that, Static reached out, taking a firm grip on Allie's arms. Sending a charge into her metal skin, he swiftly levitated the two of them to the uppermost balcony and through the roof access. Spinning, he zapped the lock with an electrical jolt that melted the mechanism, making it impossible for Harlequin's goons to follow them to the roof.
Pulling the mylar disc from his pocket he charged it, guiding Allie to crouch in front of him on its surface. As they ascended above the skyline, red and blue flashes became visible surrounding the front of the museum, with more converging from all over the city. For a moment, he thought he saw a dark shadow leaping a narrow alley a few blocks over from the museum, but his phone chose that moment to ring.
He tapped the blue-tooth earpiece. “Hello?”
The high-pitched roaring whine of a foreign made motorcycle, probably some yahoo on an old Ninja, briefly drowned out his ability to hear the other end.
“Hello??”
The phone buzzed again in his pocket. Fishing it out he read the message scrolling up the screen.
“Nice work Static. Your friend came here looking for help, and help she will find.”
The phone made a weird beep in his ear.
“I've just uploaded a number to your phone. Call it and tell them I sent you. They can help.”
Virgil looked at the number displayed on his phone. Briefly he wondered how Oracle was able to do that kind of thing, then he thought better of it. Sometimes, gift horses are better admired from afar, but as soon as he got back in Richie's good graces he was going to get him to tear the programming on this phone apart.
Highlighting the number on the screen, he punched send.
“Doris Zeul.”
Chicago — Warehouse District: February 21st — 5:00am
"Not one step further Zapmeister Fuller!" Lena stood firmly in Virgil's path, fists on her hips, glowering as brunette hair haloed her face like the sparks on a plasma wheel.
"What?"
"Typical boy. Hello, delicate electronics. Teenager with electrostatic powers. Unless you're wearing a number 4 gauge wire grounding strap... You. No. Touchie."
“Static!” Allie growled. “Stop pestering Dr. Zeul's roomate.”
“All I said was that it looked like it was an awesome game system.”
“And you made a beeline for it like she had the new Metal Gear loaded and playing.”
Doris looked up as she snapped her phone shut. “Okay, my friend who does phlebotomy gets off shift in an hour, she's stopping by on her way home with her stick kit. In the mean time, why don't the two of you come over here and lets talk about how this 'Bang Baby' situation in Detroit came about.”
Reluctantly, Virgil pulled himself away from the end of the room containing the computer system. The room's occupants gathered in an office style seating alcove tucked away in the corner beneath the first balcony of the multi-story, apartment that took up one corner of the warehouse. Leaning forward, Doris flicked the switch on a recorder then sat back, crossed her legs and balanced a yellow legal pad on her knee.
“Assuming that Static doesn't inadvertently fry the recording device, this is Dr. Doris Zeul, interviewing subject A, known heretofore as Nails and subject B, known heretofore as Static.” Doris tapped her pen against the pad. “You are both aware that this session is now being recorded.”
“Yes,” chimed the subdued voices of the two teens.
“Lets start with how each of you were exposed to the gas. Static?”
“Me? But I don't...”
“If I'm going to be able to help Nails, I need as much information as possible on how this gas affects people, whether they wish to be changed back, or not. Don't worry, this is under full doctor/patient confidentiality.”
Morning was wearing on as Doris began to go through what they had found so far.
“So Nails, it seems that your emotional state is one of the triggers for your power. The more calm and relaxed you are, the less likely your steel skin is to manifest. Inversely, it will manifest if you are frightened or angry.”
Allie nodded slowly, her mocha skin having re-emerged following a session of deep relaxation.
“Meanwhile, Static's powers seem to have emerged with almost instinctive control.” Doris tapped her pencil against a stack of papers Lena had gleaned regarding the incident in Detroit. “Based on this data, it appears that volume of exposure is a critical element in strength of mutation and level of control, to a point. Beyond that point, the mutation dominates the individual up to the point of causing their death.”
Virgil swallowed hard. Earlier, Doris had shown him a map of the storage yard where the gang fight had occurred. His hiding place had been way too close to the indicated line for that.
“Initial indications in these reports also point toward no more than an average number of those involved in the 'Big Bang' as having the meta-gene. This means that what we are dealing with here is not a meta-gene activation event, but something entirely different, though further research may yet indicate it to be related.”
“So,” Allie stretched. “You're saying that I wouldn't have developed this ability at all without exposure to the gas.”
“There are never any hundred percent certainties, however it is extremely unlikely.” Picking up one of the reports, she flipped it open to a long chemical formula that took up the better part of the page. Grabbing a highlighter, she circled a particular section. “This tells me that whoever came up with the components of this gas had access to work that I was doing for LexCorp before my own emergence. Work that I since have discovered to have been badly misused.”
Turning, she took Allie by the hands. “I cannot promise you that there is a cure for what has happened to you, but I will do what I can to find one.” She tapped the formula. “This is my work, that means that I'm partly responsible for your condition.”
Allie leaned in and hugged Doris. “You I can forgive. Besides Giganta seems to have a fair amount to do now-a-days.”
Still holding Doris, she turned to face Static. “Him on the other hand. Following me everywhere in town and all day at school too...”
Static stared at his feet. “Allie, you're going to have to believe me when I say that up until last night, I was not following you. I think, over the last several hours, we've all come to trust each other here, but you need something more, because that tingle of yours isn't going away soon.”
With that, Virgil Hawkins pulled off Static's mask. “You see, we kinda go to the same school.”
For several months after the Big Bang, the Dakota Union High School lunchroom had been a quiet place. Well, not quiet, quiet, but normal high school quiet. The lower echelon gang-bangers had faded into the background, returning to their non-gang friends for a while. Only recently had the school gangs started to stake out their corners of the cafeteria again as new leaders rose to fill the gaps left by the disappearances of so many back in October.
Virgil drifted through the lunch line, watching his tray be filled with supposedly nutritious gloop in an industrial assembly fashion. Stepping out of the alcove that fronted the kitchen he scanned the room. In the no-mans-land of tables between two of the reconstituting gangs he spied his target. Dodging moving chairs, oversized backpacks and the odd airborne Unidentified Foodlike Object he made is way to the near-empty table.
With a screech of metal chair legs on faux marble flooring, he crashed to a seat across from the scruffy looking blonde kid. “Ya know Richie, I'm beginning to think we need another Big Bang around here. Thin out the pretenders and get us a more peaceable lunch environment.”
Richie slowly looked up from the UFOs on his tray. “So, we're back to buds,” the sarcasm dripping from his voice melting holes in the table. “Just like that.”
“No Richie, not just like that. I was an ass.” Virgil slumped in his seat. “I was afraid, and as a result I refused to try to understand. But, well, some things a new friend of mine said struck home in a way I'm sure she never intended.”
“Virgil!” Allie waved from the lunch line that wound through the cafeteria.
Virgil waved back then gestured to the empty seats surrounding them. Allie, grinning hugely nodded back, flipped a wave and disappeared through the door into the serving alcove.
“Richie, you've been my best friend since elementary school. That is important to me. The only way that I can make up for how I treated you is to try to understand and accept both parts of you. I can't promise that understanding will be easy but I will try. I owe it to you as my friend”
Richie sat there stoically, taking in Virgil's expressions. “Is this supposed to be an apology?”
“No, this is a promise to my best friend. The apology comes Saturday when Frieda lets me escort her to watch this weekend's competition at the skate park.” Virgil looked up in time to catch the shock in Richie's eyes.
“Are you...”
Virgil shook his head vigorously. “Uh uh. Nope, but I do owe her my thanks for that help she gave me back in October.”
Richie sat there a moment, his fingers wrapped around a suspiciously breadroll shaped UFO. “Can she let you know later?”
“Sure.”
A tray landed on the end of the table. “She who, Virgil? And who's your friend?”
Virgil stood. “Allie Langsford, I'd like you to meet Richie Foley.”
Unlike some of our writers, I neither live nor die by my comment count. If you like this story, please 'kudo' it using the 'Good Story' button. This story is complete and stands alone, however I will probably be writing additional adventures for Static and his compatriots. Constructive criticisms, of the writing, the style and the story are always welcome and will help me make future work even better!
The Center: Patient Zero
by: Starbuck
|
![]() |
The Center: Patient Zero -Part 1
by: Starbuck
|
![]() |
Kristyn slid into chair at the head of the conference table five minutes early, seizing the moment to make one final review her notes on the day's schedule. Four weeks previously, the Colonel had turned the daily briefing over for her to run. After a week of sitting at the table being 'the last to know', she had realized that running the center was much akin to her time spent as a role-playing game-master. The department heads were not there to inform her, she was there to make sure that they informed each other. In the subsequent weeks, she had made it a point to be in the know on all aspects of the center and on the day's briefing before her department heads entered the room. That second Monday had seen a marked improvement in the flow of the meeting, she had asked insightful questions of each person's report and made some well taken suggestions. By the end of that week the Colonel had even grunted a 'well done Keys' on his way out.
As the clock ticked closer to the meeting, the staff, now her staff, began entering. Ray and Tony rolled through the door giving each other grief about the performance of their favorite ball clubs. Dani drifted in close behind the two boys. Dr. Tipps, Ms. Fine and the other adult leadership entered, most making a beeline for the coffee pot and engaging in light smalltalk. Last to enter was the Colonel.
A cup of coffee touched down on the table by her left elbow. "Morning Mom." Liz whispered, long, straight, black hair brushed against Kris' cheek as her daughter gave her a quick hug before sliding around the table to her seat. "We missed you at breakfast."
"I ate early," Kris lifted the folder in front of her. "We got in late and I needed to review."
Colonel Harris filled his mug with black coffee and approached the table. "Ms. and Miss Keys." Every since Liz had adopted Kristyn's last name, the Colonel had used the neutral honorific or referred to Kris by her rank. With a curt nod, he took the seat opposite and began reviewing his own stack of papers.
Precisely on the hour, everyone else joined the three of them at the table. Calling the meeting to order, Kristyn orchestrated the daily litany of reports that came with making sure The Center operated smoothly and its residents were in top condition. As per usual she began with the facilities side of the operation. That this also had the adults going first and thus encouraged the kids to be more open in their reports had not gone unnoticed by the Colonel. In short order the mundane and routine were put behind them leaving only Tony's report on the newly emergent.
Of course, his briefing was the only one that Kristyn never had any preliminary information on. Looking up from her note-filled agenda Kris turned her full attention to the clairvoyant teen.
"So Tony what are we looking at, near term?"
Tony cleared his throat. "Well, it appears we have a quiet couple of weeks. Just one emergence, though it looks to be a bit of a first."
"How so?"
"So far all of us have been civilians," he glanced towards the Colonel. "Our new brother is a Junior ROTC member and her emergence event will occur in the middle of her training rotation."
"That shouldn't be a problem," Colonel Harris answered. "Who is she and where is the ROTC flight training."
"The unit is at Fort Bragg and the girl's name is Jessica Harris."
A sharp crack echoed off the walls as the handle of the Colonel's empty mug snapped off.
"Kris," Dani's grip was iron at her elbow as she steered the Mediterranean beauty down the administrative corridor. "You have to go in and talk to him."
"All right, Dani. I'm doing it!" Kristyn managed to shrug out of her best friends grip.
"Get him to open up about this next mission. Something about it is tearing him apart."
"Well duh!" Kris snapped, freezing the young african-american girl in place, briefly. "The girl's name is Harris, Dani!"
"Keys," The Colonel's gruff voice came from the office door beside them. "You and Marks better come in."
Dani tried to hide behind Kris as the two of them moved through the doorway and stood before two of the chairs. With a solid click, the Colonel latched the door behind them. Kris didn't need her friend's empathic powers to feel the pain radiating through the Colonel's tight control. Returning to the far side of his desk, the Colonel's step had the cadence of a funeral march. Neither girl recalled having ever seen the Colonel appear so, human.
"Have a seat, Ladies."
Folding into the chair, Kris bit her lower lip and tried to look at the Colonel's shoes through his desk. "So, this Jessica Harris. Is she your niece? Cousin?"
Colonel Harris shook his head.
"Sister?"
The stoic expression on his face did not waver.
Dani's jaw dropped open. "Oh my God. She's your daughter!"
Eyes narrowing, a heavy sigh escaped from the paragon of control behind the desk. "Ladies, rampant speculation, while a common teenage trait, does not become either of you."
Standing, he turned to stare out the window at the rolling hills. "No, this Jessica Harris is no relation of mine.: He placed a hand against the cool glass as if caressing the distant hills. "The other one wasn't either, though by the end..."
Silence descended over the room like an uncomfortably warm blanket. The two teens began to squirm in their seats while their host continued to stare out the window. Kristyn was inching toward the edge of her chair to excuse Dani and herself and leave the Colonel to his memories when he finally spoke.
"I've read every psych profile for every member of this command. I know exactly what each and every one of you first thought when you realized that you're in a government facility. Hell, some of you still firmly believe it, even with the evidence of the other organizations arrayed against us out there. I know I've made this commitment to the two of you before, but I will repeat it now as I swear it every morning to the mirror."
Turning, he met and held their eyes. "On the body and life of my dead foster daughter, I swear that The Center shall only ever exist to help and protect the children affected by these changes." His shoulders slumped and he sat heavily in the chair behind the desk.
"Trust is a big part of why your team... why any team works well Kris. It is time that I extended that trust to a personal level. You have a right to know what makes me tick and I trust you to handle the information in an appropriate manner. You've been allowed to believe that Brian, may his soul find peace, was the first of you to emerge. This isn't exactly true. I've carried Jessica's story for 14 long years and it is well and truly time that our patient zero's was acknowledged within our ranks.
"As with all your stories, it begins seventeen years ago with the break-in at Genetech by a S.A.L.T. B & E team..."
First Interlude
Genetech Research Facility
"Cumin, status."
"Security system is off line, come on in!"
"Rosemary, Basil and Thyme, you're free to move to position two."
"On the way."
"Nutmeg, the rent-a-cops are yours. Give them a good show."
"Got it."
Moments later the engine roar of their stolen Suburban came screaming down the deserted highway in front of the research facility. The lights suddenly bobbed and jerked sideways and the massive vehicle spun out in the entrance turn, slid backwards and slammed back-end first into the large oak trees beside the security gate. The distressed complaint of the tire-rubber and the massive crunch arriving at hilltop post a moment later.
"All good." Nutmeg's voice crackled over the radio.
The team leader, known tonight only as Cinnamon merely shook his head slowly. One of these days, that insane girl was going to kill herself with a distraction stunt, but it had the proper effect. From his overwatch position he could see two security guards from the building running toward the front gate.
"Pepper Team. Drop and freeze." In the surplus, low-light goggles he could see Rosemary, Basil and Thyme hit the ground at position two as the inside guards thundered by. He snorted, if the trailing guard stumbled, there would be thunder, and probably an earthquake too. Hell, if the round one keeled over with a heart attack, as far as Cinnamon was concerned, that would be one less grease addicted burger eater.
After the fat guard finally rolled by the team, he signaled them the all-clear to move to position three. Cumin, in his security uniform, met them at the side door. Break-ins were so much easier when someone on the inside could turn off the security system.
The team knew their jobs Cumin would guide them to the critical labs to be trashed while maintaining proper communication with his 'buddies' at the gate. Pepper Team would first destroy any research notes they found, then they would upload viruses to every computer system they encountered. Next, they'd dump any in-progress research. Along the way they would graffiti the entire facility with the S.A.L.T. mantra Saving Animal Lives TODAY! Finally the four of them would release any poor creatures that were held in the facility and escape, propping open all the doors to the outside on their way.
Cinnamon continued to watch as the security guards struggled to help a hysterical Nutmeg out of the totaled SUV. Crazy or not, that Shanahan girl knew exactly how to pull a distraction.
"Mission complete, extraction underway."
Cinnamon glanced at the heavy crystal his dive-watch and pressed the plunger on the timer. Twelve minutes. Not bad, their time could be a little quicker, but not bad at all. At the debrief, he would give them a little time to feel good about it before marking up improvements for their next action. There was a paper-mill operator in the Boston that hadn't yet gotten the message about dumping their waste where the fish lived.
"Acknowledged. Rendezvous at the Hope Springs water plant."
Cumin would stay in the nearby woods, using his radio to keep the other guards at the gate as long as possible. Emergency vehicles were beginning to arrive on the scene. With a sigh, the former SEAL slipped behind the wheel of his completely sensible Toyota and started down the hillside. Time to go play the distraught father and pull their little nutcase out of the fire.
Chapter One
T minus 9 days to Transformation
"What's up sport?" John Lee paused in reorganizing the small mountain of hurricane supplies that graced one whole side of their two car garage.
His son Jesse stopped in the doorway to the kitchen. "Captain Baker called. He said the base has a water problem. It's fine for showers, but it's not drinkable. The base is trucking in potable water from the surrounding towns, but there's a budget issue so he's asking us to each bring at least 10 cases of bottled water for drinking."
John chuckled. "Not a problem Jess, we should probably begin to rotate this stock anyway." Several months previously their warehouse club had a really good deal on Eternal brand water. They'd bought 200 cases which were now stacked against the front wall of the garage.
"So, you have me until tomorrow afternoon, Dad." Jess stepped through the door, closing it behind him and propping his elbows on the landing rail. "What's the plan?"
"Oh, just the typical touch everything twice operation," John groaned. "Your mother bought a dozen baker's racks and a couple packs of bungee cords. She wants us to move the pile, assemble the racks and then organize everything on the shelves. She's promised to dive in and help when she and Anita get back from the beauty-parlor."
John cringed as Jesse vaulted the rail, bypassing the steps. He walked over and studied the stack of baker's rack boxes. When he looked at the cover picture the sixteen year old face broke into a smile. "So Dad. What's it worth to you if I can make this job a LOT simpler."
John looked over at his son, wondering when the boy was going to hit his growth spurt. At five foot two inches, he was still shorter than his mother and his little sister was about to pass him by. "I don't know Son. What are you thinking?"
"Well," Jesse's grin turned sly. "Frank's dad has that old Nissan 280."
John groaned and laughed simultaneously. "Okay, I give. If your idea gets this job done before you leave, then we'll go talk to Mike and Frank when you get back from Bragg."
Now Jesse began to laugh. "Dad, you do know you're blind sometimes."
"Oh?"
Jesse walked around the stack of baker's rack boxes and nonchalantly began to tap his finger on the wheels at the bottom of the picture.
"You know Son, I love how you think."
Lieutenant Harris stopped outside of his new commander's office, knocked twice and waited. And waited. He was about to knock again when he heard gruff 'come in' through the frosted glass. Entering he came to attention and saluted the officer behind the desk.
"First Lieutenant Nicholas Harris reporting for duty, Sir."
He held his pose, salute crisp, eyes front, taking in the room via his peripheral vision. The deep cherry desk, spotless and polished so that it gave a near perfect reflection of the blue sky visible through the office window. Lined up at a precise forty-five degree angle in the right corner were three AT&T standard phones, one black, one green and one red. At the front of the desk sat a brass and black name placard that read 'Colonel Charles R. Wallace' in simple white letters. Aligned in the center of the desk, with millimetric precision sat a single, thick folder, closed. Slowly the Colonel behind the desk opened the folder, lifted out the first sheet, read it, put it back and closed the folder before standing and returning the salute.
"At ease, Lieutenant."
Harris relaxed his pose, widening his stance and clasping his hands in the small of his back.
"Welcome back to the Airborne, Lieutenant. Your fitrep indicates that you were top of your OCS class."
"Yes Sir. Thank you Sir."
The Colonel leaned forward onto the desk, leaving a pair of hand-prints on the glossy surface. "I'm not finished Lieutenant."
Harris clamped his jaw shut. The indications were becoming clearer that Wallace was a throwback to a different time; a martinet who demanded absolute perfect obedience from his command.
"I've never liked mustang's, Harris." The Colonel resumed his seat. "Enlisted are enlisted and officers are officers. Too many mustangs forget that. While you are an officer under my command Lieutenant Harris, you - will - not. Fraternization with non-officer subordinates will not be tolerated. Am I completely understood Lieutenant?"
His mind whirling, he unlocked his jaw. "Perfectly Sir."
"Now, to drive this point home, Lieutenant, your first assignment is the command of Junior ROTC training rotations during this summer. A little time herding cats will be good for you."
"Yes sir." Harris replied.
"Dismissed, Lieutenant."
He could feel the sneer with which the Colonel laced his rank. With a letter-perfect salute, the new Lieutenant spun on his heel and marched out of the office.
Jesse looked over at the rapidly dwindling stack of bottled water cases beside his bunk. He was really glad that he'd decided to double Captain Baker's recommendation. While he had intended the extra to be for others, at the rate he had plowed through the first eight cases, he'd be lucky if it lasted out the entire trip.
Slipping his empty canteen off the web-belt, he proceeded to fill it from the bottles in the top case. Two and a half bottles later, he screwed the cap back on the canteen and returned it to the pouch on the gear. Tilting the remaining half-bottle to his lips, he drained it in one long pull.
"Good idea Jess," his bunkmate, Frank Murphy said from the upper rack while fumbling his own canteen off his web-gear. "Can you pass three of mine up? They're saying it will break a hundred tomorrow."
"Humidity tomorrow's supposed to be a real bitch," one of the other cadets groused.
"Language Jack!" Several voices snapped. Followed by a disgruntled "I ain't doin' no more K-P because of yo mouth Smith."
"Lights out in five, Cadets." Lieutenant Harris' voice sounded from the door.
There was a scramble as the guys skinned down to their boxers or briefs, folded their uniforms and crawled into their racks. With the heat, P-T would be done early in the morning. Jess wasn't looking forward to it. He'd gotten queasy that morning and felt more than a little dizzy during the run. As the lights went out, Jess made a mental note to ask Lieutenant Harris if he'd be willing follow them with a mule loaded down with extra water instead of joining them for the run. As the flight quartermaster, he was pretty sure it would not be hard to convince him. Besides, the Lieutenant actually seemed to care.
The hum of the large fan cans at the end of the room quickly lulled the boys to sleep.
The Center: Patient Zero -Part 2
by: Starbuck
|
![]() |
Chapter Two
Transition plus four hours
Beep.
Jesse groped blindly through a thick fog.
Beep.
Somewhere ahead a car horn had blared out.
Beep.
Or was it a kitchen microwave?
Beep.
The migraine to end all migraines crashed against the inside of Jess's skull with the impact of a Banzai Pipeline wave. Then, with excruciating slowness, the pain began to recede.
Beep.
Brilliant red light flooded into the recesses in which Jesse's whimpering brain had attempted to cower from the painful noise. An inarticulate cry welled up inside and fought its way out past a dry and abraded throat.
Beep.
"Uuhhaaauuuuuu."
The sound of elephants dragging metal trees across a gravel bed in a hailstorm accosted Jesse's ears. A loud crack and devastating thunder was followed by a swift and oppressive silence. A silence too good to last as another crack and thunder was followed by a herd of elephants bringing the trees back.
"JESSE, CAN YOU HEAR ME?"
Wincing, Jess tried to move away from the obnoxiously loud voice. Unfortunately, the wince and movement made the headache worse. Now the Banzai Pipeline was composed of tiny metal ball bearings swimming in a sea of battery acid. Nausea declared war on his control and nearly won the day with its opening bombardment.
"Sorry, Jesse. Headache?" The voice returned at a more normal if not any less painful volume. "Nurse, please turn out the lights."
"Uhhhnnhhmmm." Blissful darkness descended like cool milk over Jesse's brain. "Ahhhhh."
"Don't try to talk," the voice returned. "You've been through a bit of an ordeal."
A large, cool hand gripped his left one. "Jesse, I want you to move your fingers one at a time for me, from thumb to pinky."
In the recesses of his mind, a tiny Jesse walked to a bank of levers and began pulling them.
"Good. Now, make a fist."
Jesse's hand felt as if it were a wet sponge, but he managed to curl the fingers under.
"Excellent, now on a scale of zero being no pain to four being unbearable, I want you to tell me about your headache by holding out your fingers."
Jesse held the fist for a moment then opened his hand flat, making sure to wiggle his thumb to get it counted too.
"Oooo, a real doozy. Okay, I'm going to give you something for the headache now. It is also going to make you sleep for several hours, but I'll be here when you wake up."
Jesse soon felt the pain in his head begin to fade, followed by a numb sensation that seemed to radiate to his face from around the base of his neck and his ears. Pins and needles and a slight ringing combined with a cool flow of air into his nose slowly faded with his awareness. As grogginess began to take him he started counting.
Beep.
"Lieutenant Harris, I'm Doctor McCoy, CDC Atlanta."
Harris nearly choked on his own coffee. "McCoy?!? From Atlanta?"
With a long-suffering sigh, the doctor shook his head slowly. "My first name is Joshua, not Leonard. As if I don't already catch more than enough flack in the office back home."
"I can imagine so...Doctor." The Lieutenant ruthlessly quashed the urge to say 'Bones'.
McCoy's eyes narrowed at the perceptible pause in Harris' sentence.
"I've a bit of the same issue," Lieutenant Harris quickly followed. "First name's Nicholas, Nick for short." Raising a finger, he traced the scar that ran diagonally down his forehead, to just above his left eye, then picked up below the outside corner of the eye before fading out just below his left ear.
McCoy snorted. "Could be worse, you could'a got stuck with the eye-patch."
"Had to wear the damn thing six months."
"How?" Joshua vaguely gestured toward the injury.
"Saudi. Was attached as a liaison to a Marine unit that came under fire during Sadaam's abortive incursion beyond Kuwait. Piece of shrapnel skipped off the building opposite our cover position. Rang my bell but good. The field Doc told me I was lucky it didn't take my entire face off."
The Doctor laced his long fingers together and leaned on the table. "Let's come to an agreement now Lieutenant. From here on, pop culture will stay outside the realm of our conversation until we are off duty. We're both here with a job to do."
"Agreed," Nick nodded. "So, why is the CDC so interested in a cadet with heat stroke, and why won't the doctors here let me visit with him?"
"I'm afraid that I am not at liberty to answer your questions until after our interview, Lieutenant. It might color your responses, and right now, we need to have your raw feedback and not attempts to draw connections that may or may not exist." Reaching out, McCoy ejected and re-inserted the blank tape in the recorder beside the pen cup. Activating the recorder, the Doctor named himself and Harris then stated the time and the date.
"Lieutenant Harris, the purpose of this interview is to identify any signs or symptoms you might have noticed during the time leading up to the incident with Cadet Lee. This is not an inquest and this recording will be held in strictest patient/doctor medical confidentiality. Anything you can recall, no matter how inconsequential, could help us to treat the cadet's illness. Do you understand and agree to everything you have been told?"
The Lieutenant cleared his throat. "I do, Sir."
"Then let us start with this morning's events."
"Hmmm." Harris thought for a moment. "This morning Cadet Lee was at my door, concerned for his fellow cadets about the heat."
Transition Minus Two Hours
The echoes of morning reveille had not yet faded when there was a knock at Lieutenant Harris' barrack door. "Sir?"
Quickly slipping a t-shirt over his head and tucking it into the waistband of his shorts, the Lieutenant padded to the door and opened it. "How can I help you this morning, Cadet Quartermaster Lee?"
"Sir, we appreciate you joining us on our run each morning, but with today's heat... we, rather, I was wondering if it might not be better for you to follow us with one of the mules and a load of water today."
"A good suggestion, cadet," Harris replied. "I shall have to check with the motor-pool before breakfast to see if any of the mules are available."
"Thank you sir."
Something prickled at the back of the Lieutenant's brain. "Is there something else, Cadet."
"Ah, no Sir. Just a feeling, Sir. That something bad might happen if we don't have the extra water today."
"So the Cadet seemed to have some kind of premonition of today's events?"
"I'm not sure I would call it that, Sir. I chalked it up to his familiarity with the weather in this part of the country.
"And were you able to get a mule this morning?" McCoy asked.
"Ah, no," Nick answered. "Motor-pool said they'd all been signed out the day before. Instead I had the cadets each draw an extra canteen from supply and we returned to the barrack for them to fill them and drink before the morning PT."
"Is it not true that the base's water supply is currently restricted and considered non-potable?"
"That is correct. Each Cadet brought a supply of bottled water from home."
"Bottled water?" McCoy glanced at his notepad and underlined the words. "Do you recall if Mr. Lee had any particular brand?"
"Something that began with an 'E'. I'm not sure, though there are still twelve cases of it sitting next to his bunk. Should I bring them to you?"
"Perhaps. We have had a couple incidents tied to improper bottling practices recently. It might be worth a look." The Doctor glanced up at the Lieutenant. "So what about breakfast?"
"Breakfast was typical chow-hall style. If there were something there, we'd all be down with it right now. Eggs, bacon, pancakes. They're all teenage boys with the appetites to match."
McCoy made a note to check out the cadet's chow-hall.
"Okay, so PT?"
The scorching hot sun floated above the tall pine trees on waves of rising steam. With dawn barely broken, the temperature was already well north of 80, on a rocket-ship ride to the low hundreds and a humidity count to match. The heat boiled through the humid sky causing even the most rigid of objects to appear limp and wilted. Humvee's sagged over their wheels. The flags drooped from the tops of their poles without the slightest breath of wind to stir them. The pines even seemed dessicated, occasionally losing clumps of needles in suicide dives to the ground below. Fog from the nearby river and its tributaries was swiftly burned transparent, though the water certainly hadn't left the atmosphere.
Into this heat, the flight of ROTC Cadets exited their barrack for the drill-field. Dropping their belts with depended canteens, the boys immediately fell into their daily calisthenics beginning with warm-up stretches and proceeding through the daily gamut of activities familiar to soldiers and school PE classes the world over.
After a few final stretches, the Lieutenant got them ready for the morning run. Noticing that a couple of them were looking a bit pale, he first ordered everyone to stop and drink at least 1/2 of a canteen of water.
"Cadet Smith!"
"Sir!"
"You're fond of using your mouth, how about today, you lead the cadences!"
Snickers rumbled through the group. "Busted Jack!"
Forming up the flight, the Lieutenant lead them off the drill-field at a swift jog.
Jesse awoke the second time to the sensation of something thick and warm resting on the bridge of his nose. He tried to lift his hand to move it off his face, only to discover that his hands were strapped to the rails on either side of his bed.
Moments later, he heard the door click and then swing shut with a thump.
"Uhhahhhah."
"Shhh." A voice whispered back. "Don't try to talk just yet Jesse. I'm Doctor Langdon, if you remember our earlier conversation, please tell me how your headache is."
Thinking a moment, Jesse made a fist with his right hand then held out one finger.
"Ah, good, so it won't hurt if I stop whispering then." Jesse could hear the smile in the Doctor's voice.
"Uhhuuu."
"Ah ah aaah. No talking yet. Your body's been through quite a bit of stress today. Now I've got something here for you to drink, so first I'm going to raise your bed a bit."
The whir of an electric motor was soon followed by the sensation of the bedding sliding against Jesse's back. He felt the heavy blanket on his chest slide down a bit and then the bed came to a stop.
"Just sip a little of this and let it soak into your mouth before swallowing it. Don't worry, there's a lot here, and you will get to drink every bit of it." The doctor chuckled. "Matter of fact, I will insist that you do."
Jesse tugged at the straps holding his arms in place and frowned while he sipped from the straw.
"Sorry, but the restraints have to stay until we're sure your electrolyte balance has been restored. Right now, you're highly susceptible to seizures due to the chemical imbalance created by the dehydration that lead to your heat stroke."
"Wwhat?" Jesse's voice came out dry and husky.
"Shh. Don't talk yet." Doctor Langdon held the straw to Jesse's lips again. "You might do your vocal chords permanent damage."
Jesse sucked on the straw, savoring the cool flavor of the drink as it swirled around his mouth and trickled down his throat.
"In a little while, once I'm satisfied you won't do any damage to your voice, another doctor will be in to ask you some questions about what happened to you today. It might be a good idea if you thought about it now so as to be ready for him."
Jesse nodded, bumping his nose against the straw. Leaning his head off the pillow, he recaptured the straw and took another pull of the drink.
"Ah loves the taste of plastic in the morning!" Frank Murphy reached over and punched Jesse in the shoulder.
Holding his peace until the typhoon in his stomach settled, Jesse leaned heavily against the white, clapboard siding of the barrack. Heat seemed to be radiating away from his dry skin and his stomach had seen fit to declare war on his brain. In the shade of the building he took several deep breaths and concentrated hard on calming his stomach. Nausea and dizziness under control, he pulled the canteen from his hip and fumbled with the cap. After what seemed an eternity, he managed to remove the top and tilted the spout to his lips. After barely a mouthful the canteen was dry.
"Okay Cadets!" Lieutenant Harris announced. "We're late for the heavy weapons range! Form up and move out."
"Shit YEAH!" Jack hooted.
"JACK!" The entire flight turned on their fellow cadet.
Jesse smirked and shook his head. Standing up straight, he took a step away from the wall. As he did so, the rigid control over his stomach slipped and the nausea stormed back. The world tilted to the right and began to spin around him as the other boys shouted their imprecations at their linguistically challenged compatriot. In the ensuing ruckus, no one saw him fold over and collapse.
McCoy sat up in his chair and took a moment to stretch his right hand, rubbing the tender side of his ring finger where he'd been gripping the pen while taking notes.
Rubbing the bridge of his nose between his finger and thumb, the Doctor reviewed his notes. "So you formed up the cadets for the march over to the weapons range and that's when you noticed Cadet Lee unconscious on the ground."
"That is correct," Harris answered.
"Then what?"
"Cadet Lee!" Harris charged around the boys standing at attention to the form curled in a fetal position on the ground. As he passed, the boys broke formation, turning to look at where their Lieutenant was running.
Harris reached the boy and rolled him onto his back. Snatching up his right wrist, he tried to detect a pulse, but his own heart was thudding too hard in his chest to be able to tell. Moving his hand to the cadet's throat he felt there for a pulse against the cool, clammy skin.
"MURPHY! Get on the horn to 911. Medical emergency!"
"Sir!" The cadet snapped to attention then dashed for the door to the barrack.
Under Harris' fingers Jesse's weak, thready pulse flickered and stopped. The color seemed to immediately drain from the boy's features save for a bluish tinge around the lips.
"Crap!!!" Harris pressed his ear against the boy's chest but was unable to hear any sound from the heart. "Smith! Get inside and tell Murphy it's a full blown heat stroke with heart attack! The rest of you get drinking water and soak a blanket in cold water in one of the showers and get it back out here. MOVE!"
One of the other cadets dropped in beside him, reaching out and checking the pulse points. "You have your orders cadet..."
"Wilson, Sir." The cadet answered. "You need me. None of the others are CPR certified. Hang on while I clear his airway."
Taking two fingers Harris traced the line of Lee's ribs to the base of the sternum. Laying the fingers above the V of the sternum, he set the heel of his palm and prepared to started chest compressions.
"Airway is clear sir."
"Understood, breathe 2 on 15."
"One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six. Seven. Eight. Nine. Ten. Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. Breathe! Breathe!"
Harris paused and Cadet Wilson tilted Jesse's head back, pinched his nose shut and exhaled into his mouth. After checking again for a pulse, they started the cycle over.
"One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six... Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. Breathe!"
The boys drifted back out of the barrack carrying water and the wet blanket.
"One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six... Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. Breathe!"
Sirens sounded in the distance and two of the cadets ran to the access road to wait for the ambulance.
"One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six... Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. Breathe!"
"Come on Cadet Lee. Stay with us!" Harris growled.
"One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six... Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. Breathe!"
The siren built to a crescendo and cut off in the loud complaint of rubber tires on a loose gravel surface. The sound of men running with heavy gear rumbled behind him as he continued.
"One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six... Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. Breathe!"
Two men and three large bags crashed to the ground around them as they struggled to keep Jesse's body going. "Don't stop," the first one said. "What do we have."
"Heat stroke with full on cardiac arrhythmia." Wilson answered, while glancing at his watch. "Time of compressions now two minutes."
"One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six... Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. Breathe!"
The base EMTs began laying out sensors on the cadet's chest and began hooking them up to monitoring equipment. "Okay, give me a pause for a baseline."
Wilson breathed once more for Jesse then both leaned back while the Lieutenant shook out his arms.
"Flatline. Charging paddles. Resume compressions."
"Switch!" Wilson said, leaning in and taking the compression position.
"One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six... Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. Breathe!"
Harris leaned in and breathed for the cadet. One of the EMTs leaned in with a pair of scissors and cut Jesse's shirt open down the middle.
"Ready!" The EMT by the machine shouted.
The other grabbed the paddles and moved into position, waiting for the fifteen-count. "Clear!"
Harris and Wilson leaned back as the EMT set the paddles in position, checked everyone was clear and hit the plunger. Jesse's body levitated on the back of his head and his heels then dropped. The heart monitor blipped a couple times then flattened again.
"Resume." Wilson growled, leaning back into the compressions.
"One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six... Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. Breathe!"
"Charging to setting two," the EMT stated.
"Ready!"
"Clear!"
"All right! We've got a pulse. Kid, you know how to use a breather bag?" Wilson took the bag, verified the airway was still clear, fitted the mouthpiece between Jesse's lips and then began squeezing and releasing it in a slow, rhythmic fashion. The two EMT's packed up their gear and fetched the stretcher from the back of their ambulance.
Once Jesse was loaded on the stretcher, the EMTs took a moment to slip cool-packs under his arms and on either side of his head. Then, with the help of the cadets, they got the stretcher loaded and roared off to the base hospital.
"Twenty calls since my TEMP certification this spring, fifteen wrecks, five in-house falls. Lots of bruises, blood and broken bones. Nothing really life-threatening... and my first real save, had to be a buddy." Wilson sagged against the Lieutenant.
The Lieutenant stiffened, then lay an arm around Cadet Wilson's shoulders and said the only thing he could.
"Good work son."
Harris felt more drained after his interview with the CDC Doctor than he had after the frantic efforts that morning to keep one of his cadets alive. Now he was following as McCoy maneuvered through the corridors of the hospital as if he had worked there for years. Pausing, he opened a door to a long narrow room with a window lining one wall. Leaning down, he pressed a button on a metal speaker box under the glass.
"This is an observation room. We can stand here, watch and hear without disturbing the patient within."
In the darkened room beyond, Nick could just make out the shape of a body laying in the hospital bed. A moment later, the hospital room's door cracked open and another doctor stepped into the room. Walking to the bed in the dark, the doctor removed what appeared to be a sleep-mask from the head of the person in the bed.
"Jesse, it's Doctor Langdon. Are you awake?" The speaker under the window crackled.
McCoy leaned closer to the Lieutenant. "The patient has been sedated. What we're about to reveal to him is going to be something of a shock. You see, we've never, ever had a case like this before. It's like something out of 40's pulp sci-fi."
"Yes doctor." A tired voice replied through the speaker.
"Jesse, you've been through a serious trauma." Langdon's quiet voice seemed calculated to soothe the listener. "Something more than the heat stroke happened to you this morning and we need to understand why.
"Your body has undergone some significant changes. In a moment, I'm going to turn the lights on so you can see."
"What kind of changes?" Jesse's voice seemed higher and worried in spite of the sedative.
"I think it would be easier to show you than to try to describe it. But I promise you that we are all going to do our best to help you get back to the way you were."
A moment later, the room lights were turned on. Harris stood there speechless, staring at the bed. Instead of a wiry teen male with brown eyes, dark brown hair and a deep tan, there was a very attractive teen girl with reddish blond hair, green eyes and creme colored skin. Her wrists were secured to the rails on either side of the bed and one arm had an IV line strung from it.
Jess blinked her eyes at the light then looked down to see the swell of her breasts rising beneath the light blanket. Harris watched her knees move together sharply under the blanket and then he realized exactly what she was checking for.
"Holy..."
"...crap!"
The Center: Patient Zero -Part 3
by: Starbuck
|
![]() |
Chapter Three
Outside Charlotte, North Carolina
In the stifling afternoon heat, those of the Lee's neighbors who were home were surprised out of the air-conditioned comfort of their houses by the arrival of a convoy of white vans. Vans accompanied by a hastily activated National Guard unit with orders to perform crowd control and stay out of the way. As the large brakes complained loudly of stopping the heavy vehicles, two men in white isolation suits leaped from the back of the second vehicle and hustled, Michelin-Man style, to the front door. The soldiers deployed in a cordon around the edges of the Lee's property while more men in white began roping off a perimeter within which no one not wearing the baggy white suits was to be allowed.
Moments after the first two knocked on the door, a frightened young voice reached out by telephone. “Mom?”
The quavery sound of Anita's voice immediately set off alarm bells for Melissa Lee. “What's the matter honey?”
“Men in white spacesuits just knocked on the door and told me to stay inside. Said they're from the ceedeecee. Mom, what's the ceedeecee? I can see more of them outside in big white vans. And soldiers. They said I should call you and Dad and tell you to come straight home.”
Melissa's staff watched through the window of her office as the color drained completely from their boss' face. They watched, worried yet unaware, as she completed the incoming call then immediately dialed out, held a brief, animated conversation then hung up. The assistant manager barely comprehended what she was saying as she flew by on her way out the door. All he understood for sure was that something was wrong at home and she might not be in for the rest of the week.
As the sound of their boss squealing tires out of the parking lot faded, the heavy whop of helicopter blades drew their attention upward, where a pair of Blackhawks in army olive drab rocketed across their vision on a line that would soon intersect with the empty high-school parking lot.
Joshua held up an arm to shield his eyes against the blast of air and dust that swept through the cabin as the helicopter's crew chief threw open the UH-60's right-side door. With the improved view, the CDC Doctor watched the ground approach rapidly and he involuntarily stiffened, closing his eyes in anticipation of the inevitable impact.
He felt his weight shoot upward, followed by an amazingly gentle thump. Cracking open one eye, he saw Lieutenant Harris already jumping down from the door and moving in a straight line outward from the helicopter, only ducking slightly until he was clear of the rotors, which were still spinning at high speed. McCoy fumbled with the seat belts until the crew-chief took mercy on him and undid the latch with a shake of his head. In a deep crouch, he ran through the maelstrom kicked up by the buzzing machine to the waiting sheriff’s patrol car.
“Hey Bones, you can stand up now,” Harris chuckled. “Sheriff Whitaker, Doctor Joshua McCoy, CDC Atlanta.”
“Listen Fury," the doctor growled. "There are two things I detest in this world. Helicopters only count as one of them.”
Nick shook his head then turned to the Sheriff. “Sorry about that, he's a bit grouchy about his name...”
“...and the thought of what would happen if a gust of wind just happened to tilt one of those blades down to neck level as I was running beneath them,” McCoy spat. Reaching out, he offered his hand to the Sheriff. “A pleasure to meet you Sheriff, especially as your transportation isn't a mobile guillotine.”
A cloud of dust announced the departure of the first helicopter and the arrival of the second, from which alighted McCoy's medical support team. The group moved swiftly to load their gear into a white panel van. Once the team was loaded, McCoy and Harris climbed in the car with the sheriff and the two vehicles moved swiftly away from the high-school in the direction of the Lee residence.
But for the life of him, all he could come up with was a weird mash-up of the movies 'E.T.' and 'Red Dawn'. His house was in the process of being wrapped in a clear plastic bubble while numerous white tents were being erected or were already set up around it. Dispersed around the edges of his property were soldiers in forest BDU's, looking fully ready to repel an invasion.
"Welcome home sir..."
John shook his head abruptly at the interruption to his thoughts. "Sorry?"
The soldier, looking barely older than his own son, shook his head. "I said welcome home sir. The doctor from the CDC has asked that you meet him in that tent." Turning, the soldier waved toward one of the pavilions that had been set up in the front yard. The one that was distinguished by a hamster-tube leading from it to the now plastic covered front porch.
Parking his truck, John zombie-walked to the tent, wondering exactly what the hell was going on.
Nick noted the puzzled and haunted expression on the father's face as the worried man stepped through the tent flap. It was a complimentary match for the look on his wife's face. The daughter, who was huddled against her mother's side merely looked scared. John moved straight to the chairs where his family was sitting, sliding into the seat beside his daughter and embracing the women. Harris could see the old Jesse in all three of them. On the other hand, he had expected that one of the women would at least have borne some resemblance to the girl Jesse had become. An expectation that now lay in ashes, along with about half the theories that Joshua had spouted off in the hours since the cadet's condition had been revealed to the Lieutenant.
McCoy scooped up a legal-sized clipboard off one of the tables and nodded toward the three people sitting at the far end of the tent. Nick fell in on his right as the CDC doctor lead the way to the seated family, stopping on the opposite side of a folding table that had been set up on that end of the tent.
"Mister and Missus Lee?" He gestured for them to draw their chairs closer to the table. "My name is Joshua McCoy. I'm a doctor with the CDC's Atlanta office." He swept his hand in a gesture that encompassed Nick. "And this is Lieutenant Nicholas Harris of the 82nd Airborne. I'd like to apologize for the spectacle that has descended upon your home. May I offer you something to drink? Coffee? Soda?"
While both the adults declined, the daughter worked up her nerve. "Can I get a diet Pepsi?"
McCoy's over the top inhalation of breath, wide rolled eyes and hands dramatically clutched to his heart, was followed by a quiet exclamation. "Ahhhh. You did hear me say I was from Atlanta, right?"
The girl nodded a bit uncertainly.
"My wife works for Coca-Cola." Joshua winked. "But if you don't tell her, I won't."
At the wave of his hand, one of his team brought over a cup of ice and a can of diet Pepsi for the girl. The girl's smile and giggle went far towards relaxing the tension that had filled the tent since the mother's arrival twenty minutes earlier. Joshua and Nick pulled up chairs on their side of the table and sat down.
The father leaned onto the table. "So what exactly are your people doing on my property Doctor McCoy?"
Joshua's shoulders tensed and hunched as the doctor looked down at the clipboard on the table.
After his years of military service, both as a non-com and now as an officer, Nick knew that what was about to be laid on the table was not going to be easy for any of the parties present. He cleared his throat, choosing his words carefully, in spite of knowing that the parents were only going to hear what they wanted to hear of what he was about to say.
"As Joshua said, I'm Lieutenant Harris. I am the training officer for the JROTC cadet flight your son is assigned to."
As Nick feared, in spite of the stress he had put on the 'is', both parents went immediately pale. "Jesse is alive and in good health... Or so the doctors assure me." He quickly followed up. "However we did have an incident this morning and the results of that incident are at the core of why we are here now."
Both parents swallowed hard, but remained silent in their seats, Anita clutched tightly between them.
McCoy looked up from his clipboard. "At oh eight hundred this morning your son suffered from what at first appeared to be a case of heat stroke..."
Staring at the acoustical tiles on the ceiling, he watched each of the scenes play out like a movie. In spite of the speed of the review, all of the information seemed to slot into his memory. With very little effort, his mind could compare any element, replacing them at a whim and tracing out the new lines of probability. A worried frown graced his newly feminine features, very few of the scenarios appeared to have positive conclusions. It seemed like in almost every outcome his father just couldn't accept the changes. Looking at the decision chains, he could see where small differences early lead to big effects later. Jesse sincerely hoped that the shadowy visions he was having were a case of his imagination running away with him, like a waking nightmare.
Earlier, Doctor Langdon had determined that the risk of seizures was low enough that the restraints could be removed. Now, to distract himself from the dark nature of his thoughts in the solitude of the hospital room, Jesse let his hands wander, exploring the strange shape of his new body. The uncomfortable weight on his chest that he had initially taken for a heavy blanket soon drew his attention. With guilty temerity, his hands came to rest on the swelling breasts that now adorned his chest.
For years, he'd had a crush on Mary Spellman, one of the school cheerleaders. As a teenage guy, he'd dreamed about getting to gently touch those forbidden regions of her female body. The sensuous shiver that raced down his spine at the light touch of his hands on his own chest suddenly brought all the changes home and the reality clicked into place. He was now a she. A SHE who was now likely to be a target of those same feelings he held for Mary.
Nausea returned, he did not want this. He had been happy as a boy. He enjoyed hunting with his father and thoughts of a military career. Women weren't allowed in combat, which meant that all the fun stuff he had looked forward to would probably be excluded from any career she might be allowed. Oh God, he was a she now. Would they even allow him/her to join? Or would they assume that he chose this and therefore must be gay? Tears began to leak from the newborn female's eyes. The boy who was Jesse cried for his lost manhood, while the girl he had become succumbed to her fear of this strange new situation in which she found herself.
The tears soon turned to huge racking sobs. Sobs so powerful that it was difficult for her to get her breath. In her state, she failed to hear the duty nurse open the door and quickly leave. In fact, she barely registered the presence of Doctor Langdon as he leaned over to inject a sedative into her I.V. line.
As the sobs subsided, the nurse sat beside her, holding the new girl's hand, gently stroking it and humming a quiet, peaceful tune. Sleep gently washed up over Jesse's consciousness, her last sensation being the nurse stroking her hand as she gently sponged the tears from her cheeks.
The mother looked pale while the the father's face had colored a deep red. It was the young daughter who found her voice first. "So Jesse is now my big sister? That is sooo COOL!"
Nick tensed as rage erupted from the chair beside Anita. "It is NOT cool! You're the high-powered doctor here. Undo this!"
"Mister Lee, I would like nothing better than to do exactly that. Your son does not deserve to have his life turned completely inside out, but because of what occurred, that is exactly what is going to happen until we understand this event. This wasn't some surgical procedure that went wrong or something we can cure with a pill." The doctor took a deep breath.
"Your son's changes took place on a genetic level. Even his blood type has changed from O negative to AB positive. That alone should have killed him. Whatever it is that happened to him did not just change his physical gender, it re-sculpted his bone structure. Jesse is not a female caricature draped over a male frame, he is a very attractive female who looks as if she has been one all her life."
"We're educated people Doctor McCoy," Melissa Lee said calmly. "What you have described is impossible. People do not spontaneously swap genders."
"You are correct Missus Lee," McCoy answered. "In all of recorded medical history there are not even any apocryphal accounts that remotely resemble what happened to Jesse. We cannot begin to explain or understand it. That is why we are here. Between this house and the week he spent at Fort Bragg, there must be some environmental factor that triggered the incident."
Nick flipped a page over on the clipboard in front of him. "Normally a medical issue would not draw the attention of high levels of government, but the abnormal nature of this event has. If word of this event were to spread, the government believes that it would cause a public panic. National Command Authority has issued the following orders relating to Jesse Lee's change pending the discovery of its causes and/or his restoration to pre-change status. Under federal imminent domain, and in the interest of public health, the government is purchasing your house and all of its contents."
The Lee's started to protest, but Nick raised his hand. "Please let me finish and then I can answer your questions."
Their protests subsided.
"This is not a government land grab like seems to make the news so much lately. Per the provisos of the order, you will be paid twice fair market value for your property. Additionally, as personal items are cleared of any connection to Jesse's illness, they shall be returned to your family. Your family will be relocated, initially to Fort Bragg base family housing until proper further arrangements can be made. On base jobs commensurate with your current positions and salaries will be arranged. What happened to your son occurred on an active military reservation. The army takes care of its own, even the JROTC cadets."
McCoy leaned forward sliding an official document across the table, the large blue seal at the top announcing its importance ahead of his voice. "By order of the President of the United States, no mention of your son's condition may be made to anyone outside of the list appended to the back of this document. Your signatures are required."
"Nicely organized," McCoy's muffled voice said.
Harris looked up from the rack of dry-goods he was studying. "Jesse said that he and his dad set up the racks the weekend before he reported to Bragg."
"How many cases of water did you say he brought to camp?"
"Twenty."
McCoy gestured to the large stack of bottled water cases on the front wall of the garage. "Looks like he barely made a dent in their stock."
"Yeah, Jesse said the family wasn't prepared when Hugo came through a few years ago. Every since, they've kept a full month stash of emergency supplies on hand."
"Hmm... Hope Springs' Eternal Natural Spring Water," Joshua read. "There's a young lady at the office who's addicted to this particular brand."
Second Interlude
Center for Disease Control — Atlanta, Georgia
Some men, when placed into high stress positions, gain weight. Unhealthy eating, sedentary desk-work and the instinctual human reaction to store energy when under stress combine to cause these individual's waistlines to expand to fill the available space between the arms of their comfortable leather office chairs.
Dr. Hubert Arrington was not such a man.
For him stress had the opposite reaction. It had accelerated his metabolism causing him to burn off somewhere north of a hundred pounds since he had taken the Director's position at the CDC. His once stocky and impressive six foot two inch physique had devolved into a hunched-over, cadaverous caricature of the man he had been just five years previously.
He could feel each tick of the clock. Retirement was coming soon. His only question was whether it would be in that comfortable Florida golf community his wife liked so much, or if it was going to be in a eighteen inch by thirty inch by eighty-four inch box.
The ding of the elevator pulled his attention away from thoughts of retirement. Squaring his shoulders, he marched smartly into the clerical warren of his organization.
“Good morning Doctor,” Kari Spencer smiled at him past the bottle of Eternal water she was about to sip from. “I'll be right in with today's reports.”
Hubert noted the size of her smile. “You seem in a good mood today, how was this morning's checkup?”
“Great!” The attractive brunette blushed. “Five weeks!”
The doctor chuckled. “Congratulations! Have you told the Duke fan yet?” As a graduate of the University of North Carolina medical school, the doctor had long teased Kari about her husband's fixation.
Kari's smile fell a bit as she gathered up the files and water bottle then followed him into his office. “I called Mike's job, but he'll be in meetings all day, something about problems the company is having in the Houston office. I guess I'll surprise him at dinner.”
“Some surprise! I remember when Lexi told me about our first.” He picked up one of the files and noted the title. Mortality Statistics: Quarter One 1994. “We were on our way to a romantic dinner and I almost totaled our GTO.”
Kari smiled again. “Not much in today's pile, Doctor. We have the wrap-up reports on the west-coast e-coli outbreak. Trends wants you to pay close attention to a blip they've marked in the mortality stats folder, and McCoy has faxed a preliminary report, sealed and eyes only for you on that 'special' the Army called for help with.”
“Thank you Mrs. Spencer. Why don't you take the afternoon off so you can prepare your husband's surprise.”
“Really!” Kari suppressed the urge to squeal. “Thank you sir!”
Her short hair bobbed happily as the administrative professional glided to the door.
“Oh, Mrs. Spencer, have you thought of any names?”
Stopping at the door, she put on a minx-like grin. “If its a boy, he'll be Cameron.” With a wink she ducked out the door, latching it against the exaggerated groan that escaped from the Carolina fan behind the desk.
Chuckling to himself, Hubert flipped open the mortality statistics report to the flagged section. After a moment the chuckles died as he stared at the door, then looked again at the title of the section.
Disturbing Increase in Postpartum Mortality — A National Trend:
The Center: Patient Zero -Part 4
by: Starbuck
|
![]() |
Chapter Four
Jesse struggled to wake up.
Normally, he would have been the first one bouncing out of bed, but thoughts of what now faced him in the mirror made him want to stay asleep, praying that what his mind and body were telling him were part of some weird nightmare. Unfortunately, that option was ripped away from the new Jesse by a stabbing pain in her stomach. In a sharp motion, she curled around her belly, the sudden movement eliciting an anguished moan. Moments later, the fluorescent lights snapped on as the duty nurse swept through the door.
“Easy honey,” the nurse said as she lay a hand on Jesse's shoulder. “Cramps?”
The teenager could only moan and nod as another wave of pain radiated outward from her stomach. Her breathing becoming short and her vision beginning to blur.
“Shhh. Try to lay back down slowly. Stretch the muscles gently.” As the girl slowly relaxed, the nurse took a moment to lean out the door and wave to the duty desk for Doctor Langdon to be paged.
Returning to her patient, the nurse began gently rubbing her stomach, feeling the knots in the muscles below her ribcage and gently encouraging them to release. The doctor arrived moments later as the girl was finally able to melt back into the thin mattress of the hospital bed. A peaceful respite that was soon broken by a moment of total mortification as her stomach loudly grumbled and groaned.
Skin bright red and eyes wide, her focus shifted from the equally wide eyes of nurse to the doctor and back again. After five eternal seconds the nurse snorted, then snickered. The unexpected mirth soon infected Jesse who began to giggle, then laugh out loud. Unfortunately, the spasms of laughter soon began to affect the still twitchy muscles of her stomach and the hunger cramps returned with a vengeance.
As the nurse once more eased the teen's knotted muscles Doctor Langdon turned to the telephone and placed a quick call to the hospital cafeteria. Returning to her bedside, he held her left hand.
“Hindsight's 20/20 Jesse,” the doctor apologized. “I should have realized that the change your body has undergone would require tremendous reserves of energy. Energy that must be replaced. I have the cafeteria bringing up a tray of sandwiches. Just try to lie still until they get here.”
Jesse merely nodded as her stomach complained loudly at the delay.
Lieutenant Harris pulled the gray Suburban to a stop in in the driveway of the V.I.P. Guest quarters. Pocketing the keys he took a moment to adjust his cover in the mirror then check his watch before stepping out on to the pavement. With near-perfect timing, the black SUV with the Lee's on-board moved through the blue of the mercury vapor streetlights and pulled in behind Harris' vehicle.
Stepping to the door behind the driver, he depressed the latch, took a half-step back and came to attention. “Mrs. Lee, welcome to Fort Bragg. It is well after visiting hours, but as soon as we have you settled into temporary quarters, I'm to escort the three of you to Womack to visit with y... with Jesse.”
Covering his faux-pax with with a smile, he held out an arm to assist the travel-weary mother from the truck.
“Harris! How.” The three hour ride had not helped John's anger with the situation any.
“Helicopter. Been back on the ground barely long enough to change uniforms and fetch your transportation from the motor-pool.”
“Transportation?”
Harris casually waved toward the gray wagon. “As the doctor explained. Until we know what caused Jesse's illness, everything is suspect. We are providing you with this vehicle until yours are either cleared or replaced.”
He ascended the steps to the small porch that marked the entrance to the building. “We've assigned you temporarily to V.I.P. Guest quarters. As you can see, they are built on a duplex plan. Currently the other half is not occupied so you should have no troubles with noisy neighbors while you adjust to the change.”
Mildly ravenous, Jess polished off the golden delicious apple core in his right hand and tore into the fourth hoagie.
“Hello, cafeteria? … This is Doctor Landon up on five. Yes, could you have another half-dozen sandwiches and a bowl of fruit sent up to room 515? Thanks.”
Jess mumbled her thanks around the mouthful of bread, cheese and meat she was chewing.
“You're welcome.” The doctor responded to the semi-articulate grunt. “I'd hate for you to go cannibal on your family. They'll be here in an hour.”
The nurse shot a look over at the grinning doctor. “Hey, what about me! We're state-side. The nursing staff doesn't get hazard pay!”
Completely missing the nurse's repartee, Jess forced a swallow. “Family?!? Here!?”
Langdon nodded.
“A..and they know... about... about...” Unable to articulate words for what had happened, the girl in the bed waved her hands from her chest to her hips and back. “This.”
The hum from earlier re-lit in the back of her head as the varied permutations she'd run sprang back into flux. Rapidly her brain categorized the potentials and eliminated all the ones where her parents didn't know about her change before they entered the room. Having done so she rifled through the possible outcomes, fearing what she knew wasn't there. By not being able to control how her father found out about her condition, the probabilities of her father accepting her as she now was had become zero.
She came out of her catatonic state to the blinding flash of the doctor's pen-light in her eyes. Blinking furiously, the girl shook her head, trying to rid her vision of the drifting blue-green smear. Visions of Jesse's lost relationship with her father swam behind the glow.
Suddenly, her body stiffened. She saw her father, in hunting gear carrying a rifle. In her vision, he was screaming incoherently at her, anger coloring his face.
She could feel her own anger welling inside of her. The vision snapped and jumped and they were at a strange house, she was throwing clothes in a bag while her father screamed in another room. She kissed the top of her sister's head and turned toward the door. Rage and sadness suffused her.
“Jesse Lee, if you take one step out that door, you can NEVER come back!”
She paused for the briefest of moments, then walked through the open door.
“Jesse?” There was a sharp snap of fingers by her left ear. “Hello Jesse, are you with us?”
Doctor Langdon's voice cut through her mental fog and she nodded slowly.
“You weren't here for a bit there. Can you tell me what happened?”
“I...I'm not sure?” She took a deep breath. “I think...”
The click of the door opening and Lieutenant Harris' voice interrupted her train of thought. “And 515, here we are.”
Her father stepped through the door first, carrying the tray of sandwiches they'd liberated from the orderly who had been about to enter. “Hiya Sport. How ya... feel..ing.” Jesse's father's eyes landed on the distinct curves that lay, barely hidden, beneath the sheet.
“Oh hell.”
“Cellarage under the stage. Bardo! I win!!!” Anita crowed her way into the room.
“Not now Nit,” the girl on the bed growled.
“Hey, only Jesse calls me Nit,” the younger girl pouted, then blinked. “Jesse?”
John stood frozen, the tray of sandwiches in front of him like some weird restaurant display. He knew what McCoy and Harris had told him happened, but seeing his son... A white-hot haze descended over his brain and he remembered nothing else until he found himself sitting on a bench across the parking lot from the hospital's main entrance.
Melissa was about to scold Anita for being insensitive to what Jesse was going through when her new daughter's growl was echoed by the man standing beside her. Out of reflex, she caught the tray of sandwiches as it was shoved towards her. Rage swept from the room and she could hear the cursing in the hallway begin just as the door swung shut.
She was torn, but only briefly, by the need to chase after her husband of 18 years, knowing that she was best suited to soothe the roaring beast within him. But then she turned and looked at the young woman laying on the bed. The girl had rapidly grown as pale as the sheet by which she was covered. She watched as the girl's lower lip began to quiver and her eyes began to glisten.
With a heart-wrenching sob one word escaped the girl's mouth. “Dad.”
The pain and anguish enunciated in those three little letters erased all thought of chasing down the thing that had stormed out of the room. Her husband could take care of himself, for now, Melissa's child, her first-born, her Jesse needed her far more.
Somehow Anita ended up holding the tray of sandwiches as a sob broke from Melissa's throat and she wrapped herself around the girl in the bed.
“Shh Jess. Mommy's here.”
The dark air was almost still, with only the occasional breeze to move the humid blanket that lay over the base. To the southeast towering clouds blotted out the stars, randomly backlit by the silent flash of lightning. The thunder swallowed by the intervening distance of moisture-laden air. Wan light washed out to the bench that sat beneath a tree bordering the parking lot, dimly illuminating the man slouched on the wooden slats. A pair of security guards stood in the pool of light gathered in front of the hospital, keeping a wary eye on the man.
The door opened and another man, this one wearing the white smock of a doctor, stepped through. Pausing briefly, he scanned the parking lot then walked casually across, taking a seat at the opposite end of the bench. He fumbled briefly at a pocket inside the white lab-coat, pulling out a pack of Marlboro's. Digging in his pant's pocket, the doctor slipped a silver lighter out. Tamping a cigarette free of the pack he grabbed it between his teeth, pulling it out. The metallic click of the cap opening was followed by the snick of the wheel being spun. The sweet smell of burning lighter fluid followed by lit tobacco drifted to the opposite end of the bench.
“Aren't you doctor's always on the public's back to drop that habit?” John grumbled.
McCoy snorted. “I have bigger fish to fry.” He held the cigarette up. “This. This keeps me sane.”
“Bigger fish...” John trailed off.
“Like what happened to Jesse.” Joshua waved toward a lit window on the hospital's fifth floor. “I give you a seven out of ten.”
“Huh?” The older man looked over at the young doctor. “What?”
“Seven out of ten. If what happened to Jesse happened to my son, I wouldn't have just yelled, screamed and cursed my way out of the building.” McCoy pulled out the Marlboro pack. “Cigarette?”
Reaching out, John plucked one from the pack and stuck it in his mouth. “I shouldn't be doing this,” he mumbled as McCoy flicked the lighter and lit it for him. After a slow drag on it he began coughing.
“Easy John.”
“Been a while. I quit cold turkey when Jesse brought home his fifth grade health book. You know, the one with the picture of the black 'smoker's lung' in it. Haven't even looked at a cigarette since, until tonight.”
McCoy took a long pull on the cigarette then let it out slowly as he watched the lightning play across the distant clouds, the occasional low grumble beginning to reach his ears. “Thing is, this stress, figuring out the mystery of what happened to your son. This is what I live for. But I'll tell you something really, really important.”
John leaned back on the bench while McCoy paused to finish off the cigarette and stamp it out on the concrete.
“As much as I hated being the one to tell you what happened this afternoon, there is one thing about that meeting that made the whole thing far more bearable. Your son is still alive, Mr. Lee. He may be a drop dead gorgeous girl now, but dammit Jesse is alive. Ninety percent of the families I interview don't have that.”
McCoy got up and walked across the parking lot and through the hospital doors without looking back. Behind him John dropped the cigarette on the sidewalk and curled over his knees, tears flowing down his cheeks as the gathering storm grew closer.
Third Interlude:
Penthouse- Carson Tower- New York City
Jason Carson stood on the balcony overlooking Central Park. Bill Gates could have Seattle with is grunge rock and all that rain. New York was the center of power in the world for up and coming companies and no company was as up and coming as Carson Software. Where else could you rub shoulders with more of the real movers and shakers in industry. Only five years after leaving Seattle to strike out on his own and Carson Software was already the first choice for hundreds of different industrial and business applications.
Carson Software was an ostentatious success and its Chairman/CEO was a flamboyant figure making the world of computer programming hip and cool. He stepped back from the rail, draining the last sip of scotch from his glass. Setting the glass on the mahogany bar, he closed the balcony door.
The quiet ding of the elevator arriving drew him to the entrance foyer. With a glance at his watch he reached for the door.
“Right on time My Love,” he greeted his wife as she stepped through the open door. Her chauffeur and her bodyguard each lugging suitcases and shopping packages behind her.
“So Emilie, how was the shoot?”
Emilie Dupreche ne Carson smiled at her husband of just over a year. Her soft, Parisian accent sending a shiver down his spine. “Tiring.” Reaching in the cooler under the bar she pulled out a cold bottle of water.
Strolling over to her, he lifted her flowing locks free of her right ear and nibbled at it. “Ah, perhaps ze Hope Springz zhpokesmodel...” he kissed her neck... “is too tired for mi amore?”
Turning in his arms, she leaned in to press her lips against his. “Your faux accent is atrocious, Mon cher...” Her voice faded to a quiet whipser. “Je veux un petit garçon.”
“Yes, my love.” He mumbled as she pulled him into the bedroom.