She nodded. I wished she was still able to talk in my head. That would’ve made planning something much easier.
When I looked back around the corner, the two men were still standing there. They were standing like statues, their backs against the wall, guns at the ready. Where had Raven found these guys? They looked very serious, and seemed to know exactly what they were doing. I tried to figure out if there was a way to get to them without their knowing, but I couldn’t think of any. I was faster than normal, but not by much. They’d still hear me and have plenty of time to shoot at me. The hallway offered no cover. It’d be like a shooting gallery.
I pulled back and leaned my head up against the wall. I had to think. I needed to come up with some plan. Ideas flashed through my head, but most of them wouldn’t work.
Then one that latched on. It could work.
I reached into my pocket and pulled out the vial of asthenés plásma, keeping it clutched tight in my fist so only a little bit of light leaked out. I reached my clenched fist out into the hallway.
“Trust me,” I whispered to Samantha.
I opened my fist a tiny bit, letting a small flash of bright white light leak out. Then I closed my hand again and pulled it back out of the hallway.
I could hear the two soldiers jump to attention. I shoved the vial back into my pocket and turned to Samantha. I grabbed the doorknob closest to us and swung the door open. “Get in,” I whispered.
She looked at me, confused, taking a step back into the classroom the doorway led to.
“Hurry!” I whispered. “They’re coming.”
She went the rest of the way into the classroom and quietly shut the door behind her.
I watched the two beams of light from the flashlights attached to the soldiers’ assault rifles bounce up and down the hallway. They were getting closer and closer, investigating the bit of light they’d seen out of the corners of their eyes. I clenched my fists and stood at the corner of the hallway, ready for them to make their appearance.
The barrel of the first assault rifle appeared around the corner. I reached out and grabbed it, yanking it upwards as hard as I could. The gun slammed into the face of the man who was carrying it. I grabbed the rifle from the other man, yanking it backwards out of his hand and sending it flying back into the hallway. Then I grabbed the man himself and slammed his head against the wall, leaving a dent in the drywall.
The first soldier grabbed me from behind, pulled me backwards and slammed my body against the wall. The air flew from my lungs, and the wall bent from the force of it all. The soldier slammed a one-two punch to my chest. As he launched his next attack, I jumped out of the way just in time. His fist slammed into the wall and burst all the way through.
I whirled and punched his trapped arm. It cracked under the force of the blow, but before he could howl in pain, I slammed my fist to his head, knocking him unconscious. He fell to the floor, pulling his broken arm out of the hole it had made in the wall.
The soldier I’d slammed into the wall slowly got up from the floor. He placed his hand against the wall to help himself up, but I kicked him in the chest, sending him backwards into the opposite wall. He smashed into it, then slumped to the floor in a passed-out heap.
I grabbed the first soldier and dragged him to the door of the classroom that Samantha was hiding in, then pulled him in behind me. “Are you okay?” I asked as I set the soldier down.
“Yeah,” Samantha said. “That didn’t take long.”
“I guess all that fighting with Selena helped.”
I went back to grab the other soldier. Once they were both in the classroom, I shut the door behind us. I gathered up their guns and handed one of the assault rifles to Samantha. “You got some training on these, right?”
Samantha nodded. “I’ve shot them a couple of times in the past week.”
“Good,” I said. “Hopefully we won’t need them, but you never know.”
I clicked off my flashlight, and Samantha followed suit. Then we made our way down the hallway toward the light that shone up from the first floor.
We moved down it as quietly as we could. There was nobody in the first floor hallway. The soldiers who weren’t out looking for me were probably going to be in the gymnasium with Raven.
Samantha and I put our backs up against the wall that the hallway shared with the gym. We quietly made our way towards the door that led to the gym, alert for any signs of Raven’s men. I reached the door and, after taking a deep breath, peeked through the window.
Raven had everybody gathered in the middle of the gym. His soldiers were standing around with guns pointed at my friends, ready to shoot should any of them make the wrong move. Raven himself was sitting in a chair, his broken wrist being bandaged up by the soldier who’d been working on Doug’s stitches.
Doug’s body still lay lifeless next to Selena, who was glowering at Raven, the look on her face saying she wanted nothing more than to tear him apart.
“What’s it look like?” Samantha whispered over my shoulder.
“Not good,” I said. “They’re all over the place. I have no idea how we’re going to get to Doug.”
There was a pregnant pause before Samantha spoke up again. “Can I see?”
I turned to meet her gaze. Her eyes were sad but her determination seemed strong. “Are you sure you want to?” I asked.
Samantha hesitated for a moment before nodding. “Maybe I can see some way we can get in there.”
“Okay,” I said, then stepped back, making room for her to peek through the window.
Samantha gazed through the window, searching for her brother’s body. I watched her face, dreading the moment she found him. Suddenly, her eyes grew wide and instantly began to water. She slammed her hand over her mouth, trying to keep herself from crying out. Her body shook with silent sobs.
I rested a hand on her shoulder. She watched for a few seconds longer before turning away and burying her face against my chest. I wrapped my arms around her as she cried as quietly as she could.
“We’re going to save him,” I promised her. “It won’t be long before Doug’s back with us.”
She nodded. “I know,” she struggled to say. “It’s just so hard.”
“Hey,” I said, holding her away from me so I could look into her eyes. “Don’t worry about a thing. I’m going to take care of all of this.”
A door opened. I looked behind Samantha and saw a couple of soldiers stepping out of a room at the other end of the hallway that I guessed they’d been searching.
“I’ve got eyes on target!” one of them screamed, pointing at the two of us.
Without hesitation, I swooped Samantha up in my arms, turned and ran out of the gym as fast as I could. As I stepped out in the windy night, the fire from the barracks was dying down. I ran down the road of the army base as fast as I could, leaving Doug and everybody else behind.
The Messenger
“What are you doing?” Samantha demanded as I set her down to take a rest.
We’d reached the edges of the base, and I could feel my powers growing stronger. “Taking a rest,” I said, leaning forward on my knees. “I can only carry you just so far when I don’t have all my powers.”
“No,” she said. “Why are you running away from them? From my brother? Kane, we have to save them.”
“You don’t think I know that?” I said. “You saw all the men who were in the gym. When those guys saw us, we had nowhere else to run. Right now, our only option is to wait things out. If we go back right now, we’d be dead. Running into someplace without a plan is what got Selena and I in trouble in Johannesburg. I’m not going to endanger them by charging in right now.”
Samantha scowled at me, not happy with my decision. I couldn’t really blame her, either. She’d seen her brother’s dead body. We had the chance to bring him back, but we couldn’t do it right away—at least not without causing more loss of life.
“We’re going to save him,” I said, laying a hand on
Samantha’s shoulder. “And Selena, Drew—everybody's that trapped in there. As soon as we can. But maybe if we wait a while, things will become easier. Become safer. Maybe they’ll take Doug and put him somewhere away from everybody else.” I didn’t want to use the word morgue. “Or at least wait until there’s fewer soldiers around. Either way, we’re just going to have to wait a while. We can’t go storming in there. Not right now.”
Samantha processed what I was telling her, and finally nodded. “Okay, you’re right. I don’t want to put anybody else’s life on the line.”
I gripped her shoulder, then pulled her in for a hug. “I know you don’t,” I said.
I closed my eyes and breathed her in. I couldn’t imagine what she was going through, but I was going to do everything in my power to get her out of it. I was going to bring Doug back. And I couldn’t wait to see the look on his face when we told him that he actually was a Super.
I smiled, thinking about him. He’d been there since the beginning, practically. He was there when Samantha told me about the nuke being launched at me when I was fighting Richter. He was the one who’d told us about the Supers all around the world. If it weren’t for him, we wouldn’t have the asthenés plásma, a small amount of which was in my pocket, ready to save him.
Samantha pulled away and wiped a tear from her eye. “Okay, I’m ready to go. I think I can walk from here.”
“Okay,” I said. “We don’t have much longer to go before we’ll be out of the radius of the asthenés plásma. Then I’ll fly up and keep my eyes and ears peeled on the base.”
“What about the asthenés plásma in your pocket?” Samantha asked, pointing.
“It’s not having any affect on me,” I said, patting it. “I don’t know why. Maybe it’s because it’s such a small amount or something?”
Samantha shrugged. “Maybe. It’s not as if we know anything about that stuff.”
“You have no idea.”
THE SUN WAS BEGINNING to rise as I hovered in the air about a mile away from the army base that Raven and his men had taken over. Using a combination of my Super vision and hearing, I knew everything that was going on in there. Unfortunately, most of it wasn’t good. Selena and the rest of the prisoners were still being kept under heavy guard in the gymnasium. Raven along with his men who weren’t standing guard were tearing the place apart, searching for the asthenés plásma.
I had no idea what I was going to do. I’d never felt so powerless. My friends could be killed at any second, and I only had enough asthenés plásma to bring back one of them. Things would’ve been so much easer if I could just fly in there and bring them to safety.
“I request the presence of Raven,” I heard a man say, breaking me from my train of thought. I zeroed in and watched as three men conversed with the guards standing outside the door to the gym.
“Why shouldn’t we kill you right now?” one of the guards asked.
“Ever heard the phrase, ‘Don’t shoot the messenger’? I have a feeling Atlas would be very upset if harm should come to his messengers.”
The two guards exchanged worried glances. “You’re saying you’re with Atlas?” the other guard asked.
“That’s correct. My message to Raven is as important as it is urgent. Don’t delay us further,” the messenger said.
“Of course,” the guard agreed, opening the door. “Follow me. I’ll take you to him.”
I was watching and listening as intently as possible. Anything they were about to say was going to help me figure out the big picture.
The walked in silence for a bit. I closed my eyes since I couldn’t see them anymore, using all my powers to make sure I could hear them as clearly as possible.
A door opened, and they stepped into a carpeted room. Raven had moved from the gymnasium, where the prisoners were still being held, to one of the offices on the first floor.
They still hadn’t found the asthenés plásma. Samantha’s hiding place was better than I’d thought.
“What is the cause for this interruption?” Raven demanded. “I was in the middle of my meditations.”
“Sir, I have here a messenger from Atlas—”
“I don’t give a damn about Atlas!” Raven shouted. “You can tell him I said that. I have other matters to worry about.”
“Well, you’d better start worrying about him,” the messenger said. “I have a very important message from him. One that you’d do best not to ignore.”
There was a pause. I could hear Raven’s slow, concentrated breathing. “Very well, then. Be quick about it.”
“Atlas sends his congratulations on taking Tempest—well, the few minutes that you had him—and his pests prisoner. He’s impressed by the forces you were able to muster up in a week’s time.”
“How does Atlas know about what I’ve done?” Raven asked, sounding annoyed.
“Word travels fast, Raven. Atlas has eyes and ears all over,” the messenger said, his tone patronizing. There was definitely something he wasn’t saying. “Atlas wishes for you to join the Legion. Your forces, knowledge, and power would make you a great ally.”
Raven scoffed. “I hardly think that’s the case. I have something that Atlas wants. Once he has it, I’ll be no more important to him than the dirt beneath his feet.”
The messenger laughed. “Raven, you don’t understand. This is all just pleasantries. Atlas isn’t the monster some believe him to be. He’s reasonable, and would value you as a member of his team. But you know what he wants. He’ll come and take the asthenés plásma by force if he has to. You and your forces will be no match for him.”
“How does Atlas know about the asthenés plásma?” Raven asked. I could hear a bit of fear in his voice.
The messenger took a step forward. “You’re smart enough, Raven. I imagine you can figure it out on your own.”
“Fine then,” Raven said after a moment, clearing his throat. “Atlas would be welcome here, but only as long as he knows that I’m the one who is in charge of the asthenés plásma. I’ll just be allowing him to use it.”
“Bold choice, Raven. I’m sure we’ll be able to reach a suitable compromise,” the messenger said. “That is all. I must be leaving now. You’ll be hearing from us again very soon.”
I opened my eyes and stopped listening. My mind was whirling with thoughts, all of them bad. If Atlas was coming, I needed to get Selena and the rest of the group out of there, and fast.
I flew down to the tree in the woods that Samantha was sitting beneath. She was staring at the ground, deep in thought, but she looked up when she saw me flying down and jumped to her feet. I could tell she felt frustrated that she couldn’t watch through my eyes. It had turned out that even the little bit of asthenés plásma I had in my pocket was enough to stop her powers.
“Any news?” she asked excitedly. “When can we save Doug?” Her face dropped when she saw the look on mine.
I took a seat on the ground, trying to figure out what I was going to do. So far, I’d found no plan that could work, especially not now that Atlas was entering the equation.
“What’s wrong? Kane, tell me what’s going on,” Samantha said, kneeling down in front of me.
“Atlas is coming. He’s coming for the asthenés plásma.”
“Oh, god,” Samantha said, sinking down across from me. Her gaze wandered off as she processed the possibilities. “We have to act now, if there’s going to be any hope of saving them.”
An idea formed in my mind. An idea that could actually work. I smiled at my solution.
“What is it?” Samantha asked.
“I think I have an idea,” I said. “But we’re going to need backup.”
Return
I flew above London, homing in on the government building that housed the base of operations for Leopold Renner and his team. When I found it, I landed the top of the front steps and swung open the entry door. Inside, the large entry room was filled with security guards and receptionists typing at the computers behind their de
sks.
“Can I help you?” a guard said from behind me.
I turned and saw him walking towards me, one hand on his gun. His eyes met mine, and I could see that he knew instantly who I was.
“Get me Leopold Renner. I need to talk to him now.”
A few minutes later, I was waiting in a small office. The door swung open and Leopold walked in, curiosity on his face.
“Kane, it’s a pleasure to see you,” he said, stretching out his hand.
I grabbed it and shook it. “I’m sorry for barging in on you like this, but I need your help,” I said as I let go of his hand. “My team—my family—is in trouble.”
“We’ll do whatever we can to help you,” he said.
“What do you know about a Super named Raven?”
Leopold paused for a moment. “Raven, you say? I think I’ve heard that name before. He’s from South Africa, correct?”
I nodded. “He had taken over Johannesburg. Selena and I liberated the city from him after we left London.” I pulled the vial of asthenés plásma out of my pocket. Leopold’s eyes grew wide at the sight of it. “He had a whole bottle of this liquid called asthenés plásma. It’s extremely powerful. For most Supers, when they’re around the whole bottle of it, their powers are taken away completely.”
Leopold looked around, thinking. “Now that you mention it, I have felt a bit...strange since I entered this room.” He looked at the vial. “You’re telling me there’s a whole bottle of that stuff?”
I nodded.
“I’m going to go get my superiors and the rest of the team. Then you need to tell us everything.”
LESS THAN AN HOUR LATER, I was standing outside the building with Leopold, Ellie, Thomas, Nathan, and Avery. There were only six of us, but I was confident that our mission would be a success. It had to be. I didn’t know what I’d do with myself if it wasn’t.
“Don’t forget—our powers won’t work once we get in there,” I said.
“I’m not sure how we could forget something like that,” Thomas said with a lot of snark in his tone.
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