âWeâre pretty screwed,â Solaris said, scanning his assembled Anchors and the other influential supers of Franklin. Individually, each of the assembled supers had a chance at taking him down. Together, the chances were good. Oddly enough, Solaris felt most at ease around the people most likely to end his life. Made him feel like Tom again.
âDefine âpretty screwedâ.â Nocturne asked, tapping the table nervously. Underneath his sexy midnight black mask with gold highlights, the super had an unfortunate face with a bit of an underbite. Looks werenât everything, though. The man could lull Solaris into a lethal sleep if he allowed the sound waves to reach him.
âItâs like we thought, there is no âoff buttonâ. No fail-safe, nada. Thereâs only one person who can tell the Replicators what to do, and he was so thoroughly destroyed that even finding DNA Evidence he existed is difficult.â`
Outside the labs, anyway.
Silence reigned for a long minute.
âSo what do we do?â Nocturne asked.
âWe fight like hell, obviously,â Solaris said with a shrug as he sat down, âAccording to the kidâs debriefing, before Mass Driver was disintegrated, he identified a piece of hyperweave as belonging to Bio-Master, of Washington city. From the eighties.â
âNâzzakheil,â Granny Z. let out a guttural Manitian curse.
âExplain,â Freddy Steel said. He wasnât dumb, but he was young for a super of his power, and didnât have all the context.
âBiomaster has been offering cheap designer-babies in Washington city for almostâ¦forty years now. Since the late eighties. And if Chicago has robots indistinguishable from humans, able to grow up and reproduce by themselvesâ¦Then weâre looking at two generations of android sleeper agents firmly embedded in Washington Cityâs politics and defense.â Hexen supplied.
âFuck,â Freddy Steel cursed, scowling.
âWashington city is meant to be the last nail in the coffin.â Mechanaut said from across the table.
âYeah, if we hadnât found out about it, weâd likely have leaned on them for assistance, only to have it withdrawn at a critical moment,â Solaris said, clasping his hands together as he thought. Some days it felt like the entire world rested on his shoulders. In this case, it might be accurate. Franklin and Washington were two of the biggest cities on the east coast, and if they went down, it was only a matter of time before the western seaboard followed, and then the rest of the world.
Honestly, who knows if there are any cities remaining on the other continents. The communications with them could be faked, if they pulled a soft swap like they did with Washington City.
âWhy the hell did those idiots have to kick the hornetâs nest?â Freddy Steel demanded sourly.
âI suppose youâd like the Replicators to have more time to prepare our demise?â Locust asked. She wasnât an Anchor, per se, but she was a pillar of the community, and had enough super-political sway to grant her entrance to their deliberations.
âYou-â
âSheâs right,â Solaris interrupted the young man. âIt was gonna happen sooner or later, and those kids actually did us a huge favor by kicking things off before they were ready. Doesnât mean itâs gonna be pleasant. There is one thing Iâm wondering: Why the last laser blast to destroy the computer if there was nothing on it?â
âThe replicators have very direct thinking,â Mechanaut offered. âThere had to have been something on that mech whose value outweighed exposing their satellites to Solaris. Wasnât necessarily the computer. It was probably my boy. Heâs definitely Worthy of being on the Kill First list.â
âDarryl!â Hexen admonished.
âWhat?â Mechanaut shrugged the massive steel shoulders of his suit. âHe is. Iâd
kill him first, is all Iâm sayinâ.â
âThe replicators knew their satellites were compromised already, according to the kidâs debrief, so why not take a last potshot at them?â Quake asked with a shrug. The womanâs ability to shake anything, regardless of size,was undeniably powerful. Not great for keeping Solaris in check, but capable of singlehandedly causing an extinction event.
âBecause if that was their logic, then they couldâve taken their last shot at something more valuable than a boat full of rookies. Solaris, the Nexus Communications Centerâ¦or The Egg, are all way more valuable targets than Mechanautâs kid. No offense.â Guile said.
The glowing red LED eyes of Mechanautâs suit narrowed.
âHow would they even know where The Egg is?â Safros asked.
âNeuron?â Freddy Steel offered.
Solaris took a deep breath and clasped his hands, leaning forward.
âBill mightâve been turned into a raving lunatic by his proximity to the thing, but even in the deepest depths of his paranoia, he would never sell out Franklin City.â Solaris said.
âSo whoâs babysitting that thing now?â Quake asked.
âAll you need to know,â Solaris said. âIs that we have someone reliable monitoring the egg in a custodial capacity.â
***Brendan***
âDonât get me wrong,â Brendan said as the Nexus agent took the hood off. âIâm all for getting fifty thousand dollars a night to mop floors, butâ¦â Something about this was off. It was nagging at Brendon, and he couldnât quite put his finger on it.
âArenât you supposed to use a blindfold instead of a bag on your head for secret stuff?â Brendan asked. Yeah, that was it, he thought as he surveyed his tools. Heâd seen plenty of movies with blindfolds, not so many with hoods.
âHood works better than a blindfold,â The agent said.
That made sense. Movies often didnât get it right.
Mop: check.
bucket: check.
Cart loaded to the brim with cleaning supplies and military-grade surveillance equipment: Check.
âSo, mop the floors, and if anything changes or gets weird I just set these cone thingies around it?â He asked, pointing at the cone-thingies on the cart. Theyâd told him what they were, some kind of..sensy-majigger, but Brendan hadnât really absorbed it. He figured it was something like the âwet floorâ cones he was familiar with, just modeled for secret government facilities.
Brendan didnât see why they couldnât just make cones labeled âweird stuffâ and leave it at that, but hey, it was their dime.
Brendan had tried to negotiate his pay down to something more normal, like a hundred bucks a night, but the guy behind the desk had insisted on giving Brendan the full fifty grand, as âhazard payâ, with a twenty thousand a night bump after the first month as a âpromotionâ.
Brendan didnât get it, but he supposed if they were that serious it, they probably knew what they were paying for. Brendan didnât.
The stonefaced man whoâd transported Brendan here nodded to confirm his question. Brendan didnât see a name tag and heâd never heard the manâs name, so he assumed the guyâs name was Steve until proven otherwise.
âAlright, same deal as always, I guess. Iâll see you in the morning, Steve.â
Steve nodded before pressing the button that made the super-big steel doors slam shut behind Brendan.
Brendan shrugged, put his headphones on and began jamming out as he pushed his mop through the dim halls lit by small blue lights. As usual, nothing happened.
They must REALLY want these floors clean.
***Paradox***
Solaris sat behind his desk, scanning the Chicago team with a critical eye.
âWhereâs Plagius?â Solaris asked.
Perry winced. âAfter getting cut in half, Plagius is taking aâ¦little break from superheroing.â That was putting it mildly. The Drainer was having trouble sleeping, and kept waking up thinking he was still cut in half, slowly dying on the floor of a museum storage unit. The sight of Replicators and large light fixtures turned him into a shaking mess.
âSmarter than I thought,â Solaris muttered, opening up the drawer of his desk and handing it to Perry. âGive him this personâs card. They specialize inâ¦minimalizing the impact of trauma.â
Perry recognized the Minder on the card. He specialized in erasing the unwanted memories of willing subjects. âYou mean erasing it so you can get your Drainer back in the fight?â
âNeed all hands on deck,â Solaris said with a shrug. âHe can retire when the cityâs not riding the edge of total annihilation.â
âThe cityâs always riding the edge of total annihilation,â Perry said, his headache returning as dimensional energy eddied around Solaris.
Solaris smiled in response to Perryâs statement. Tacit acknowledgement.
Perry pocketed the card. âSo, what did you need from us?â
Theyâd already been thoroughly debriefed earlier, so Perry didnât think they needed anything more from them than some supers on the wall.
Anyone whose heart was beating was performing some kind of service on The Wall right now, from nine-year olds sweeping up spent cartridges, women working in factories, all the way to elderly, wheelchair-bound veterans cleaning and maintaining soldierâs gear.
That wasnât even including the supers. Anyone who could do ANYTHING remotely valuable was living on the wall 24/7, fending off the unending ocean of robots, and that included Manitian mages like his cousins.
âWhat do I need from you?â Solaris asked, steepling his fingers. âA solution to our current problem would be ideal, but if you donât have that, Iâll settle for an answer to a question.â
âSir?â
âWhy did the Replicators waste their satellite advantage on your team?â he asked.
âIâ¦donât know. The computer?â Perry asked.
âThe computer was a dud.â Solaris said, waving it aside. the matter-of fact way he said it sent cold down Perryâs spine.
I almost died for a dud?
âDonât get me wrong, it gave us valuable information, but it was mostly confirmation of things that weâd already worked out for ourselves over the last decades fighting the Replicators. There is no kill switch, no magical control panel, no remote, no keyword or passcode. Professor Replica, and only
Professor Replica can give them orders.â
âThenâ¦make a Professor Replica?â Perry said, garnering incredulous stares from the rest of his team.
âSolid outside the box thinking,â Solaris said. âBut itâs been tried. Many times. Never works. Weâve even got a room filled with clones of the man for that exact reason.â
Perry shook his head. âIf it wasnât the computer, I donât know what would be valuable enough in Boomer to justify wasting their last shot. Maybe me?â
His cousin snorted.
Perry didnât want to come across conceited, but in another ten levels, the Replicators probably wouldnât have anything on him. And it wouldnât take that long to get there. If theyâd calculated his rate of growth, it made sense theyâd want to kill him before he could present a problem.
âDonât overestimate yourself,â Solaris said.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âCan I ask a question?â Heather asked, raising her hand.
âOf course.â Solaris rumbled.
âWhy the hell are you hiding behind a desk while everyone else is out there fighting robots twenty-four seven to defend the city?â She asked.
âWraith,â Natalie said quietly, shifting nervously under Solarisâs intense gaze.
âBecause Iâm the nuclear deterrent.â Solaris said, turning his computer monitor to face them. the display showed replicators all the way to the horizon. The farms and wilderness surrounding the megacity had been trampled down to nothing.
âHidden somewhere in there are robots with superpowers that can tie me up, maybe for a couple seconds, maybe for a few hours. If I go out there and start blasting everything that moves, one of them will snag me. During the time I am delayed, they will proceed to launch an offensive, Think hypersonic missiles. In the fifteen seconds I spend playing patty-cake, half the city could be reduced to smoldering rubble. If they have something that can delay me for hours, then there might not even be a city once I break out of it.â
âOn the topic of property destruction,â Solaris said, shifting his attention back to Perry. âNice job with the upgrades to the city. Everything you touched is holding up way better than it has any right to, and that velcro-concrete you made that lets Bruisers stick things back together after they break stuff? Muah.â Solaris made a âchefâs kissâ gesture.
âSir.â Perry nodded.
âOnly a few things are actually made of it right now, but Iâve been getting reports from everyone about how much they like it. If the human race isnât extinct next month, Iâd like to talk about upgrading your production capacity.â
âSounds good.â Perry said.
âWas there anything else?â Chemestro asked, seemingly losing patience with what he mustâve considered idle chatter.
âJust that one question and your assignments,â Solaris said, retrieving their orders and handing them out. âKeep that question in mind over the next few days. Really mull it over, because Iâm not satisfied with maybes.â
âWill do, sir.â Perry said, taking the orders and opening them up, seeing where he was stationed on the wall.
A moment later, Natalie tugged on his shirt and showed him her orders, which placed her on a completely different section of The Wall. Wraith, Chemestro and Sin-Eater were all assigned to different areas as well.
âYouâre separating us to see who the Replicators were going after.â Perry said, glancing back up at Solaris. âAt least do us the courtesy of telling us weâre bait.â
âOfficially, itâs because your abilities are put to the best use in those locations,â Solaris said.
âI am aware by now that âofficialâ statements are oftenâ¦deliberately misleading.â Chemestro said.
âBullshit,â Perry supplied, âthe word youâre looking for is âbullshitâ.â
âYou donât approve?â Solaris asked, rising to his feet and scanning his gaze over the assembled supers. âWell, too bad. Weâre in this for the species, boys and girls. Itâs simple numbersâ¦They have more. If I see something that may give us an advantage, Iâm going to take it. One of you may have something instrumental to ending this war, and if that means I have to put all of you in danger to suss out who or what it is, Iâm going to do it.â
âUnderstood?â
âYessir,â Chemestro said, followed quietly by Sin-Eater, Natalie, Heather (reluctantly), and Perryâs cousins.
When Solarisâs gaze settled on Perry, he shrugged, stifling a yawn.
âIâm Paradox.â
Understanding is relative.