The flickering of the portal intensified, the pylons glowing brighter and brighter. Every time she saw a tiny wisp of light drift away from the portal she felt her heart tighten just a little bit, only to be relieved when she recognized it as nothing more than runoff. Next to her, standing as stalwart as ever, Marta watched the portal with a bit of trepidation. She felt her friendâs eyes on her and graced her with a small smile. âTheyâre fighting very hard,â She said quietly. If her eyes could twinkle, they would have. Instead, they only clicked and whirred.
Marta looked her way, âAre they?â She asked and looked back up. âIs that why youâre standing?â
Sonya nodded, âYes. It is,â She said and held her head high, âIf theyâre going to risk their lives for us, the least we can do is stand for them.â
Marta looked back, âYouâre⦠not a very good villain, sometimes,â She said quietly, only loud enough for Sonya to hear with her enhanced senses.
Sonya chuckled and looked down, smiling demurely, âI suppose youâre right,â She said, just as the portal flashed with a brilliant light. Nearby, Amos let out a shout of alarm and stumbled away from the portal, covering his head. âItâs fine Amos!â She called out to him before turning her eyes on four shapes that staggered out into reality from the bloom of light. Behind them, the portal shuddered, shimmered, and slowly began to collapse in on itself. The pylons dimmed, and then faded back to simple stone.
Bluestar was cradled in Lifesaverâs arms, awake, but she didnât look like she was in any condition to stand. Firestorm was slumped over a bewildered looking Banditâs shoulder. Behind them was what appeared to be a trunk of some kind. The four of them stood in the darkening room looking more than a little dumbfounded. Their eyes wide as they looked around as if trying to figure out what had just happened to them. They finally saw Sonya, standing, waiting for them.
They look just like you did, the first time, how cute. She thought and couldnât help herself. She opened her arms and greeted them with the warmest smile she could manage, âWelcome back, Heroes.â
Firestorm coughed once and looked up, grinning once at Bandit before meeting her gaze. âWeâre back.â
Sonya heard Marta let out a sigh of relief as Amos nearly bounced about, admiring one of the screens on his equipment. âItâs dispersing! Itâs really dispersing! Mana levels dropping! Not just here! City wide! Monster appearances are going to drop like crazy! You guys really did it!â
Sonya laughed and walked over to the heroes. Bluestar got gingerly to her feet and Lifesaver took a moment to heal her a little more. She looked up at Sonya who quickly pulled her into a hug before reaching over and pulling the other three in as well. They looked at one another in surprise before returning the embrace. Sonya pulled away and Bluestar cleared her throat, âWe should start the debriefing as soon as- eep!â She gasped when Sonya put a finger to her lips and grinned at her.
âTut tut! I wonât hear it, you four are getting some rest and a heroes dinner, no arguing,â She said and then turned away with a flourish. âWe can do a proper debriefing when we have time. For now, you did your job, now itâs time for me to do mine!â She announced and cleared her throat, whipping her phone out dramatically.
âAmos! I want a full write up and report on all data obtained from the portal!â She commanded.
âOn it!â
âMarta! Get our medical team down here and give the heroes a full check up. Iâm sure Lifesaver is fine but he should get checked out just in case. Help him do any additional treatments.â
âYes maâam!â
She tapped a number in on her phone and held it up to her ear. âI need a press conference scheduled for two days from now. Worldwide broadcast.â She hung up and dialed another number, âChairman! I seem to have missed a few calls from you! How are you dear?â She laughed and kept walking towards the exit, âOh I know I know, Iâm so much trouble,â She snorted, âI have some very interesting information for you dear. Iâll give you a full briefing in a few days once weâve collected the data. Why donât you come to New York, weâll have a grand time.â
She hung up and turned to a few aides, âThe heroes brought back some trophies it looks like, help them carry it out of the building and get it to headquarters. Weâll need a place to store it.â
The aides blinked rapidly before nodding, âYes! Of course!â
She grinned to herself, in her element, and tapped one last number in on her phone, she held it up to her ear, âAh, hello, This is Sonya Chernovna, Iâd like to make a reservation tonight for a private dinner. Party of eight. Iâm sure you can make something happen, dear,â She tittered, âWhatâs your name by the way? You sound cute, could I ask you to host us?â
Behind her, Firestorm and the rest of his bedraggled party just stood there and gaped.
â
âOh I wish you could have seen it! It was amazing!â Firestorm enthused, gesturing wildly as they sat around the table together. They were sitting at a long table at a luxurious restaurant, the atmosphere was beyond refined, but they had the good fortune of being in a private room so they could let their hair down a little. He and his team were all sitting on one side of the table with Sonya directly across from him. To her left was Marta and to her right, Amos and Colin.
Sonya sipped her wine and beamed at the hero before turning to look at Bandit, âTo think you figured out how to walk on ceilings like that. I seem to recall you struggling to do more than cling to them just a little while ago. Thatâs some explosive growth, dear.â
Bandit who was clearly regretting not having his hood to cover his face, flushed furiously as he looked down into his glass. âIt-it was no big dealâ¦â
âNo big deal?â Firestorm countered, âAre you kidding, youâre the MVP of the dungeon! Sure, my fire power helped, but man, you saved Bluestar twice and got my ass out of the fire more times than I can count, and even dealt the final blow on the boss! You were amazing!â
Bandit seemed to shrink more and more as the praise kept mounting until he finally let out a growl, drained his glass in one gulp, and coughed. âAlright, fine! Yeah! I am pretty awesome!â He declared, wiping his lips.
âPlease donât get drunk,â Bluestar said with a sigh, shaking her head.
âIâm fine! Sâno problem! I killed a twenty-foot tall demon!â Bluestar shouted, throwing his fists into the air.
âI thought it was fifteen,â Colin asked from across from him, resting his chin on his palm and giving Bandit an amused look.
Bandit blinked and met his gaze before clearing his throat again, âR-right, fifteen, sâwhat I said. Right? No? Shitâ¦â He rubbed his head.
Colin gave Amos a sidelong look and grinned at him a little. âMaybe you should send some drones in with them next time, to get some proper measurements. Wouldnât want incorrect data, right?â He suggested. âYou know, men and measurements.â
Amos frowned and kept his expression still, not looking at the coy lawyer. âI trust the original report from Firestorm,â He said flatly, ignoring the off-color remark.
Sonya raised an eyebrow in their direction. That was interesting, had they even properly met before this dinner? I donât recall introducing them. She decided to let it go, sheâd interrogate Amos later about it. She glanced over at the heroes celebrating their victory and couldnât help but find the whole situation amusing. Firestorm, Bluestar, Lifesaver, and Bandit. The first for heroes of the ASTA guild sitting across from Ishtar and her inner circle. It was almost laughable.
âSo how did you find that thing anyway? Those images you showed us in the briefing,â Bluestar finally asked, leaning forward to get the conversation in a more sensible direction.
Sonya opened her mouth to speak but Amos cut in almost hurriedly. She glanced over again and spotted a small bit of annoyance on Colinâs face. Okay, definitely getting an interrogation later.
âIt was a natural step up from the ability detectors,â Amos explained, âThey check to see if there is active mana inside a personâs body. The energy that we naturally draw in and generate to let our powers work,â He tapped his finger on the table. âDuring an experiment I picked up a fairly significant amount in the air and developed what amounts to a short-range doppler radar.â
Bluestar looked flummoxed for a moment, âThatâs⦠amazing.â
He grinned, âIsnât it?â He said proudly before carrying on, âWe were able to see a monster take form in real time, theyâre basically just masses of mana that have gathered in one place. Thatâs what the portal and dungeon were too, just on a far bigger scale.â
Firestorm looked up, âYou can see a monster forming? Doesnât that mean you can have a pretty good idea when and where one might take shape?â
Amos glanced his way, he looked almost impressed. Sonya knew Amos didnât have an exactly high opinion of Firestorm, heâd muttered âhimboâ at least once before but sheâd opted to ignore it. Amos nodded slowly, âThatâs right, but itâs more like predicting a tornado. All the ingredients are present for a monster forming but that doesnât mean it will, only that the chances grow increasingly high.â
âYou should make an app,â Firestorm said quickly, leaning forward with a bright look in his eyes. Amos was taken aback and even Sonya glanced the heroâs way with a bit of confusion on her face, âIâm serious. Imagine if all of us heroes had a monster warning system. We could know exactly where to patrol instead of spending all day in pointless wandering. Could even add a dungeon monitor or something, no wait, listen! Iâm just saying-â He seemed to be babbling, worried that the distant look in Amosâ eyes was a sign of lack of interest.
Quite the contrary, Sonya thought.
She glanced over at Colin whoâs passively amused expression had turned serious. He met her gaze. Both of them had the same thought. Most apps have an end user license agreement, don't they? Would that work?
â
The Chairman rubbed his head, he hadnât expected to get a return call from that woman. Especially one admitting sheâd been up to something. Even more so that she was willing to come clean and share her findings with him now that her research was complete. It was perplexing, but not unwelcome. She had made it clear that she wanted their working relationship to be a largely positive one after the debacle involving his admitted attempt to undermine her intellectual property rights.
Had he misjudged her? Was she simply eccentric? Okay, very eccentric, but he didnât mind eccentric. Most of the truly powerful people were remarkably strange in their own ways. Heâd learned that through his rise to power.
What had been more unexpected, though, was that sheâd called him while heâd been away from headquarters and visiting home. The series of events following that had left him not only confused about her, but about everything as a whole. His son and his fiance had been in the room when sheâd called and theyâd insisted on coming to visit. Heâd been proud of his son before, as any good parent should, but even more so when heâd found his sonâs reasoning not only to be sound, but remarkably mature.
He glanced over at his sonâs fiance, Feng Hyunh for the upteenth time since theyâd gotten on the private jet and regarded her thoughtfully. He had wondered a little more than once about whether or not she was a suitable partner for his boy. While she was well connected with a powerful underworld syndicate and by extension their political allies, she had always come across as more demure and overly polite than anything else. Yet somehow, some way, she had managed to reign in his sonâs rather abrasive disposition.
That alone had significantly raised her value in his eyes.
She returned his gaze and graced him with one of her easy smiles, her purplish eye sparkling a little. âIs everything alright, Chairman?â She asked, her hands in her lap.
He blinked, realizing heâd been staring a bit longer than heâd intended to and cleared his throat, âNot at all, miss Feng, and please, feel free to call me father,â He said into his fist, looking back down at the documents on the tray heâd pulled out to give him space to continue his work.
âIâll remember to do that, Father,â she said politely, that easy smile never leaving her face.
He glanced up at his son, âYouâre a very lucky man, son.â
Duong had been staring out the window, his expression thoughtful, paying little attention to the interaction. Only when the Chairman spoke did he perk up and glance in his fatherâs direction. He turned his head and looked at Hyunh, giving her a relaxed smile and nodding. âIâd have to agree with you, Father. She has changed my life in more ways than one. It was her suggestion to form a proper guild and have the state back it formally. The President was very happy with the arrangement.â
The Chairman had of course gotten most of the details surrounding the formation of the Vietnamese Peopleâs Guild, but he hadnât gotten all the information. Namely how Duong had managed to convince the party to put so much backing behind his son. He knew nominally that his son was powerful, he had an understanding of what the âMythic-tierâ meant, but he himself was not light-touched and so couldnât fully grasp the extent of what the boy was capable of.
His son glanced at him, âWill we really be able to meet Miss Chernovna during the visit?â
The Chairman nodded, âYes, you wanted to have a word with her?â
Duong nodded, a bit sullen, âI have a lot to apologize for and I want to make sure that weâre on a better foot going forward.â
The chairman smiled, perhaps, maybe, given the womanâs eccentric nature, bygones could truly be bygones. He was looking forward to the meeting anyway. He hadnât met her face to face and already knew that she had some significant backing in Europe. She seemed more amicable than before as well, so that was a plus. More importantly, whatever sheâd discovered had been important enough that sheâd actually taken steps to reach out to him. Whatever it was, it had to be groundbreaking.
He gave his son a firm nod, âIâm looking forward to clearing everything up.â
Duong smiled, showing his teeth a little, âAs am I.â