Scrapeâ¦.scrape.
Perry lunged to his feet in the dim light of the Spirit Forge, his violent motion bringing Heather to wakefulness. The shapeshifter morphed to her feet like the T-1000, looking just as panicked as Perry.
Natalie was totally out of it.
âwhat is it?â Heather signed at him.
Perry pointed to his ear.
They paused.
Scrapeâ¦scrapeâ¦
Perry and Heather crouched low, and Perry signalled for the armor to guard Nat, quietly. It crept over to where she was sleeping and knelt, all of its weapons at the ready.
Paradox and Wraith tiptoed forward toward the noise that seemed to be emanating from behind the Spirit Forge.
Scrapeâ¦scrapeâ¦
Paradox went right while Wraith went left.
They came across the same sight.
Natalieâs dagger was perched on top of an ingot of silvery metal. It seemed to have grown joints around itâs handleguard, hilt and halfway down itâs blade, giving it a scorpion-like appearance. The dagger was using the sharpened tip of itâs blade to scratch a shape into the ingot.
Itâs own shape.
âOh, shitâ¦â Perry whispered.
âWhat?â Heather asked.
âWe gotta wake up Nat and go talk to Solaris. And my Gramma.â
***
âI mean in theory, that could work,â Gramma said, âIt would be a twisted abomination of magic and science, only capable of telling the Replicators to cease and desist, but I donât think any of us have any compunctions about that at the moment.â
The entire table of Anchors heaved a sigh of relief.
âThis isnât nearly enough soul, though,â Gramma said, pointing at the little dagger robot, still busily carving out a copy of itself. âWe would need more impressions of Professor Replicaâs soul. Where did you get this one?â she asked.
âIâm not sure.â Natalie said with a shrug, âSince Iâve been getting better at percieving my soul, Iâve notice more and more things I never saw before, thousands smudges from something as simple as a handshake. My soul is practically littered with them, and more are appearing the better I get. I kind of just assumed this was one of them, and was using it to build a prototype. If I had to guess, it was the digitizer.â
âThat what weâre calling it now?â Perry asked.
âItâs better than âhuman meatgrinderâ.â Nat responded.
âIt was his Magnum Opus,â Perry said. âThe human xerox machine. He poured his soul into making it. Literally. Maybe some of his oldest bots have a little piece of him in them, but theyâve copied themselves so much that itâs a needle in a haystack, but these âdigitizersââ¦they didnât copy themselves. Thereâs probably only one, or maybe a handful, and theyâve got enough soul in them for Nat to come away with a piece of his soul.â
âA piece of Professor Replicaâs soul.â Perry said, his voice dominating the silent room.
âSo in theory, if we caught enough of these things, Gramma Z could stitch together a Frankenstein of Professor Replica that they might listen to?â Freddy steel summarized, glancing at Solaris.
âItâs been tried beforeâ¦â Solaris said, his voice gravelly. There were actual bags under the near-omnipotent superâs eyes, which just went to show how tired he really was. âJust never like this.â
Solaris brooded for a moment, staring straight into the grain of the fancy boardroom table.
âYouâve got my permission. Do it,â he said. âTake whatever you need. This is your teamâs assignment now.â
âYessir,â Perry said. âIâm just not sure how weâre gonna find the digitizers. The replicators moved the last one out of Chicago for sure.â There was no way the replicators would allow something that integral to their plan lie around in a known location.
Dadâs massive metal suit raised its hand.
ââ¦I have an idea where you could find one.â
***Ten years ago****
âGamble with MY sonâs life?â Darryl muttered to himself, boiling over with emotions he usually shoved to the side. Concern, betrayal, fear, heartbreak.
All of it seemed to roil inside him with no possible outlet.
He paced back and forth in the lair heâd dug under the new house. It still had that new lair smell. Theyâd only been married a year and a half, and she was trying to kill his son! Claudette had completely ignored his opinion. She would vehemently deny it, but there was more than a little of her momâs callous disregard for others peeking through her bubbly exterior.
Normally that sort of thing was right up Darrylâs alley, but at the momentâ¦
âif it killed your sister, why the HELL would youâ¦â Darryl muttered to himself, hitting the far wall before spinning on the ball of his foot and pacing back the other direction.
He had to do something about this. He had to protect his son, somehow. Six years of clandestine visits, occasional sleepovers, being called âuncleâ had finally become âdadâ and they had become a FAMILY and he was failing his son!
Letâs view this rationally, the symbiotic spirit exists in Claudetteâs hippie bullshit realm, I need to make something using Claudetteâs Hippie Bullshit in order to even interact with it. Nothing Darryl made in meatspace would have any effect.
As he was pacing, a glint of light from the shelf caught his eye. It was the Death Crystal heâd stolen from Marigold. Claudetteâs Hippie Bullshit.
What was it they said about it? It can harvest causal energy and add it to your own? Itâs essentially a Drainerâ¦but itâs a rock.
The effects it has are on the same dimensional axis as Claudetteâs Hippie Bullshit.
Darryl glanced over at the partially dismantled machine that no one knew he had. To most it looked like a piece of meteorite, but it was, in fact, a piece of loot heâd gotten from one of Professor replicaâs blown-out bases, the site of a grand battle.
Replicatorsâ¦grey goo.
Darryl felt the Tinker Twitch fully seize him in its grasp, harder than heâd ever felt. Like he was a puppet in the hands of some greater force. A manic chuckle bubbling up in his throat as he grabbed the Death Crystal off the shelf and brought it over to his workbench.
Weâre going to make something extraordinary, you and I, and Claudetteâs Hippie Bullshit will never hurt my son again!
Cackling, Darryl threw the crystal into a grinder, which fed the resulting dust through all his measuring equipment.
Bits of his memory around here were heavily spotty, due to the fugue state of the Tinker Twitch. He vaguely recalled creating some kind of 4-d magnetic device to align the crystal into nanobots on multiple planes of reality, shouting in joy when they finally began grabbing pieces of inert death-crystal and replicating themselves on the fly, disappearing into nothing as the completed nanobots phased out into the fifth dimension at random.
Darryl wiped sticky sweat away from his forehead and searched for the 4-d magnetic aligner. It had vanished into the block universe an hour ago. Or did he imagine it really hard?
Whatever, I got what I needed. I gotta inject this into Perry before it loses itâs fizz.
The nanobots were currently in the process of replicating and migrating across dimensions where they would take hold in Claudetteâs Hippie Dimension. If he injected Perry after they were mostly done migrating, Perryâs protection might never boot up, or it could take years.
Darryl loaded the nanobots into a saline solution and put that into a syringe, giggling manically as he held it above his head, aiming for the tube leading up to the surface. Up to his home, where his son was being spiritually eaten alive.
Darryl frowned as his leg gave out.
His entire body came crashing down, like a puppet with its stringâs cut.
What is happening!?
Darryl barely had enough energy to shelter the syringe on the way down, preventing it from shattering on the floor.
Darryl forgot to breathe, lying there, staring at the door to the elevator without comprehending what he was looking at.
The syringe rolled away from his hand, and a tearing sensation filled his very soul.
Nothing mattered, really. He could just sit here and allow himself to die from starvation, and he would be just as much a part of the universe as he was before. Just a bit of carbon scattering on the wind. No more or less important than anything else.
Living was overrated anyway.
As Darrylâs thoughts began to fade away, joining the peaceful meta-state of the universe, a blissful nothing, he perceived the world around him fading away, leaving behind a starry void.
He couldnât muster the desire to turn his head, but he could feel the attention of something on him. Like the warmth of the sun, he simply knew it was there.
This isnât so bad, Darryl closed his eyes, resolving to wait to rejoin the whole.
Exceptâ¦
Except, if I donât give Perry the shot, heâll die.
Darrylâs soul was hollowed out, all desire to live, all his like, dislikes, desires and motivations reduced to a thin film around an empty bubble.
But if there was one thing Darryl knew, it was that heâd been a stubborn bastard five minutes ago, and heâd be DAMNED if a little lethal soul damage stopped him from saving his son.
Groaning, Darryl lifted his head, a herculean task against the pervasive ennui. In the starry void, he couldnât see the elevator to his son. He could only see the syringe in front of him, scintillating with power.
Only the syringe, andâ¦the meteorite in the corner.
Somehow, in the depths of his madness, he finally figured out what the machine was for.
My body isnât going to make it to Perryâs bedroom, Darryl thought, inspecting his hand, which seemed to be withering under his gaze. Perhaps his physical reality and Claudetteâs Hippie Reality were overlapping in this starry void, showing him how badly wounded he really was.
Did I handle Death Crystal without gloves!?
Iâm not going to make it up thereâ¦but âIâ could, Darryl thought, crawling towards Professor Replicaâs machine.
The attention beaming down on him from above studied him curiously, like a particularly interesting insect as he flopped onto the meteorite and began unhooking the devices heâd attached in a vain attempt to reverse engineer the machine.
He understood what heâd been missing now, but the point was moot.
In his altered state, Darryl was able to access a control panel that only existed in the mind. Or wherever he was right now. He hastily cleared out any pre-programming he could find, and flipped the imaginary switch.
The lumpy meteorite hummed to life and began folding in on itself as it floated to shoulder-height, turning to aim at him, revealing a glowing aperture.
Darryl glanced up at the empty night sky that watched him back, its attention beating down on him, whispering secrets even more profound than those heâd just discovered. Even more profane.
He gave the thing the finger, shortly before Darryl Zauberer was reduced to nothing.
In the other corner of the room, one of Mechanautâs decoys hummed to life.
***Paradox***
âAnd thatâs how I know thereâs one in my lair!â Mechanaut said cheerfully. âItâs tucked away underneath my undisclosed sonâs bouncy castle from when he was twelve, and the boat I never got around to finishing, behind the air compressor and a bunch of cans of kerosene.
âYou DIED
!?â Perry demanded.
âI got better,â dad said with a shrug.
Helplessly, Perry glanced over at mom, who nodded. Gramma nodded too and rolled her eyes.
âYouâve got a piece of Replicator techâ¦in your garage?â Freddy Steel asked, jaw slowly dropping. âYou realize we kill people for that, right?â
âSupervillain,â Mechanaut said, his massive suit thumbing its own chest with a clink.
âI told you I never felt his real body with my powers. I told you, didnât I!?â Quake asked, glaring accusingly at Hexen.
âYeah, you told me,â Mom said, rubbing her temple.
Perry frowned.
âThey donât knowâ¦didnât you call him Darryl like two minutes ago?â
âItâs a minor enchantment that scrambles anything anyone says in my presence that could give away our relationship. It has a short whitelist, which you and mom are on, obviously.â Mom said with a shrug.
âI know, right?â Quake said, glancing back at Mechanaut. âThis whole time weâve been treating him like a Tinker when heâs more like a technopath. Weâve got you now, M. Youâre going down.â
âI can go down anytime you like, sweetheart,â The Mechanaut suit said, winking at mom with a metallic clink.
Iâm gonna be sick.
âDarryl!â
âEnough.â Solarisâs voice cut through the bickering as he tossed the meteorite onto the table with a crunch. The super mustâve found, penetrated and pilfered Mechanautâs lair in a fraction of a second.
âI would have really liked to be aware of this earlier, Mechanaut.â Solaris said, staring at the empty Mechanaut suit.
âEh,â Dad shrugged.
âWhat can you do with this?â Solaris asked Gramma, pointing at the inert lump of pitted metal.
Gramma passed her hand over the digitizer.
âYes, thereâs quite a bit of Professor Replicaâs soul in here.â Gramma said before glancing at dad. âLess than there wouldâve been if itâd been properly stored.â
âEh,â Dad shrugged.
âBut still quite a bit. I estimate thereâs only half a dozen of these, at most. With one more like this I would have enough to make a facsimile of the original Professor, accurate down to the soul, that the machines would have no choice but to obey. An off-switch.â
âWhere do you suppose weâll get another of these? Itâs already a miracle weâve got one of them, and if theyâre smart â which they always are â theyâll have it hidden and guarded.â Solaris asked.
âI can make a sympathy spell. Itâs basically a homing signal used for locating car keys and such.â Hexen said, motioning to the digitizer. âUsing this as the base, itâll find the rest of them.â
Solaris frowned for a moment before glancing up at Perry.
âYou feel up to retrieving it, Paradox?â
New quest!
Retrieve a copy of Professor replicaâs Magnum Opus and bring it back to Nexus.
Reward: 10,000 XP, reputation up with Franklin City, Nexus, humanity in general. Continued existence of species.
Penalty for failure: Death, end of natural humanity on Earth.
Typically the penalty for failure can be avoided by rejecting the quest within 24 hours, but in this case, the penalty for failure is highly probable in any case.
Perry checked his distance to the next level.
Paradox Zauberer (Perry Z.)
Class: Garage Tinker
Level 10
HP: 11
Body: 10
Stability: 38
Nerve: 16 (22)
Attunement: 48 (42)
Free Points:0
XP to next level: 312
Spells: Light (5/5), Dragorâs Kinesis (3/3), Gretchenâs Idyllic Manifestation (1/1)
Three weeks of tearing through bots had gotten him very close to level eleven. If he went on the mission heâd level halfway through, and likely again on returning.
Then I can finally get rid of this headache, Perry thought, choking back a yawn.
Plus the whole saving humanity thing.
âWhy him?â Freddy steel asked. âWhy not us, or you?â
âBecause if itâs a wild goose chase, weâre done.â Solaris said. âI need to be here. I need my anchors here. Replicators have fed me attractive misinformation before.â
âI can do it,â Perry said, nodding.
Mom looked like she wanted to say something, but thought better of it.
âAre you sure you can manage it, Paradox?â she asked. It was odd being called his super name by his mother. Usually she called him by his full name when heâd done something wrong.
âI am,â Perry said, nodding. âI got to Chicago and back just fine.â
It was a bit touch and go, but technically correct.
âCan you cast the spell so that heâll be able to locate them?â Solaris asked, looking at Hexen.
âSure.â Hexen said with a nod.
âAlright, make it happen. Next topic is the water shortage. Take a short recess and weâll see what we can work out.â
âStay behind,â Solarisâs voice whispered in Perryâs ear.
The surrounding supers filed out, stretching from the long session, leaving Perry and Solaris alone. The light-based super walked up next to Perry and whispered in his ear.
âYour grandmother was lying. I donât know what about specifically, But if I had to guess, she was lying about the number of Digitizers itâll take to make the Off Switch.â
âSheâs gonna make a spare and try and conquer Earth with the Replicators?â Perry guessed, completely unsurprised.
âSheâll start a fight thatâll probably destroy Franklin City if I call her out on it,â Solaris continued, âSo weâll play along, get the other digitizer and sheâll help us make an off switch. Iâll be the first to admit that a Franklin city under Marigoldâs tyranny is better than nothing at all, but it wouldnât be my first choice.ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âMe neither,â Perry muttered.
âYou know about blending magic and tech better than anyone in Franklin city, hell the whole Earth. You think you can do something about this without the witch catching on?â
On the tech side, sure. Gramma was basically tech-illiterate, and Perry could probably sneak something into her remote that would sabotage it at a critical juncture, limit it, or render it inoperable. Plus, Perry was basically the only person Soalris could ask to sabotage Marigold Zauberer without having to worry about whether or not theyâd be killed in retaliation.
Perry nodded. âIâll see what I can do.â
âThanks, kid.â Solaris nodded and dismissed him.
Halfway down the hall, one of Grammaâs shadow bodyguards grabbed Perry by the arm and dragged him through an illusory wall.
âParadox,â Gramma Z said, smiling warmly at him as she sat in a chair in the concealed meeting room. âOur time has come to rule the world.â
Perry rubbed his aching temples. The headache just wouldnât go away, and this backbiting at the end of the world wasnât doing it any favors.
âYes, Grandmother?â Perry said once heâd recovered his calm.
âI lied. I have enough to make the âoff switchâ now, but I need your help to make it. Not an off switch, but your crown. A crown that can bestow control over the greatest army any world has ever seen and secure a future safe from the ravages of The Tide. Do this with me, and the Zauberer line will have a kingdom again, and you will be its king.â
âPass.â