I walked into Zach’s foyer, noting the bowl filled with people’s car keys. My stomach turned at the thought of drinking and flying. I would definitely be throwing up all over Indiana.
Don’t drink and fly, kids.
“Hey, man, good to see you,” Drew said when he saw me walk in.
I gave him a fist bump. “Alright, tell me straight: is Macy here?”
“Macy and her beau,” Drew said with an elbow prod.
The lack of amusement on my face showed Drew that I wasn’t quite ready to be cracking jokes about the whole situation.
“Yeah, she’s here,” Drew said.
I sighed. “I should probably get this over with, right?”
“I would. Treat it like a Band-Aid. Just rip it off, fast and hard.”
“Good talk,” I said as I walked past Drew and into Zach’s living room.
I was greeted by a chorus of hey’s, long time no see’s, and Where the hell have you been?’s I did my best to answer the questions as succinctly as possible, but my attention was elsewhere. Across the living room, alongside the fireplace, stood Macy. Her ginger hair was pulled up into a ponytail, and she was sipping from a cup in her hand. She looked at me out of the corner of her eye, making no effort to speak to me. She was waiting for me to make the first move.
Brian Turner, however, saw me, and let out a big smile. “Kane Andrews!” he shouted. He walked over to me and gave me a fist bump. “It’s good to see you, bro!”
I thought back to what had happened the last time Brian and I talked at a party. He’d thanked me for saving his life by calling an ambulance when he was lying broken in an alley. He had no memory that I was the one who had put him there in the first place. I was the one who’d changed Brian from being a big bully to the apparent teddy bear he was today. The Buddha of Ebon High. I could almost feel the salt being poured onto my wounds. It was bad enough that Macy was dating my enemy, but I was the one who had made him the person he was today—the person Macy had apparently fallen in love with.
“Good to see you too,” I lied.
I looked over his shoulder at Macy. She looked down and began to inspect her drink when she saw me looking at her.
“Hey, Macy,” I said.
She looked up at me. “Hi.” Then she turned back to her drink.
Ouch.
I’d had enough. I walked past Brian and right over to Macy. “Can we talk?”
“Fine.”
Without looking back, the two of us walked through the kitchen and out the back door.
I shut the door behind me, and when I turned around, Macy slapped me hard across the face.
“I deserved that,” I said.
“You deserve worse, Andrews,” she spat.
I fought the urge to wince. She wouldn’t even use my first name. “Look, I’m sorry, alright? I was going through a rough time, with Michael and everything. I just needed some space.”
Macy slapped me again, this time harder. Tears welled in her eyes. “How dare you use Michael as an excuse like that? You could’ve called. You could’ve texted. Hell, get out a pen and paper and write a goddamned letter, I don’t care. You have no excuse, Andrews. No excuse. None that I’ll accept, anyway. You’re just an asshole, and I’m through talking to you. Just leave me alone.” Macy pushed me aside and started to open the door.
I grabbed the doorknob and shut it. “Macy, please. Just listen to me, alright? I can explain.” My brain was telling me to shut up, but my heart ignored it. I was prepared to tell Macy everything. To show her the Tempest suit I had on under my clothes and explain everything.
“Get out of my way, Andrews,” she said, pushing me back. She opened the door, slipped through, and slammed it in my face before I could react.
Then she screamed.
16
Party Crashers 2.0
I swung open the door and saw the living room engulfed in flames. I stood there for a few moments, stunned. People were clambering over furniture and each other, trying to get out of the house.
“Brian!” Macy yelled, and began running toward the living room.
That was when I saw it. The fire had come from a person engulfed in flames—Brian Turner.
“Oh god, help me! What’s happening?” he screamed. He reached out to someone, and a torrent of flames shot from his hand, igniting the couch. Luckily the person he’d been reaching for was fast enough to run out of the way.
I wrapped my arms around Macy and lifted her up. She punched and kicked, trying to get free, but it made no difference to me.
“Put me down, Kane! I have to help!” she yelled.
I didn’t listen. I took her out the back door and set her down. She tried to get past me, but there was no way I was letting her back in.
“Go get help,” I said. She looked at the door behind me, trying to see Brian through the window. “Macy! Go get help!” I yelled.
She nodded, tears streaming from her eyes. “What are you going to do?”
“I’m going to try to find a hose or something,” I lied.
Macy nodded again and got out her phone as she ran to the front of the house. Once she was out of sight, I ripped off my outer clothes and revealed the Tempest outfit I was wearing underneath. I pulled the hood up, my eyes began to glow, and I ran back into the house.
The house was an inferno. Brian was running around wildly, trying to put out the flames that covered his body. From the way they shot from his body, it was clear that he wasn’t just on fire, he was the source of the flames.
Brian Turner was a Super.
“Hey, kid!” I shouted, being sure to disguise my voice and making sure I didn’t use Brian’s name.
When he turned to look at me, his face looked like it was made of lava. Flames licked from the top of his head like they were now his hair. “Help me!” he shouted.
I reached into my pocket, and as fast as I could, sent Samantha a one-letter text. I looked around for a fire extinguisher while I waited for her to respond. I dashed to the stove and looked in the cabinet beneath it. There sat a small fire extinguisher, not nearly big enough to take on the inferno Brian was creating. It was worth a shot, though.
I grabbed it and began spraying it onto him. The foam didn’t even reach him. It all evaporated almost as soon as it left the canister.
“It’s not working!” Brian cried.
“What’s up?” Samantha said in my head.
“I need you to see!” I shouted.
More flames erupted from Brian, burning a hole in the ceiling. I could hear people screaming outside in fear.
I felt the tingling.
“Holy shit, that’s not good,” Samantha said when she saw what I could.
“I’m going to try to grab him,” I told her. “Take him to water.”
I ran toward Brian, everything around me turning to slow motion. I watched as another plume of flame unfurled from his hand, reaching for the wall, ready to punch a hole through it with its force and heat.
I reached out for Brian. I could almost make out the fear and confusion radiating from his glowing orange eyes. I felt searing heat as I got closer and closer, the skin on my hands melting and immediately beginning to repair itself again. My hands touched Brian, and I screamed out in pain. The heat was so intense, I felt my suit begin to melt. It was almost as bad as the nukes I’d experienced when I was battling Richter.
I slammed through the wall of Zach’s house, leaving Brian behind. I fell to the ground, skidding across Zach’s yard, leaving a trench in my wake. I screamed in pain, and heard answering screams from the people gathering at the front of the house.
I looked down. My hands were gone. They had been completely melted away by Brian. I panicked, screaming loudly, “Holy shit!”
The bones started to regrow. Fifteen more seconds, and the flesh began to grow back. My hands tingled as the skin grew over the flesh. I had my hands back, but Brian was still on fire. If he didn’t get it under control soon, I was afraid of what might happen to those who didn’t h
ave the same healing powers I did.
“Open to suggestions,” I said, speaking to Samantha.
“I’m trying, I’m trying!”
Another explosion erupted from the house. I could hear sirens coming in the distance. I wasn’t sure how much longer the house would last.
“Okay, Doug says to run circles around him as fast as you can. It’ll create a vacuum, sucking out all the oxygen. Without oxygen, there’s no fire.”
As Samantha finished her sentence, I was already running back into the house through the hole I’d created. I got as close as I could bear to Brian, and began running as fast as I could.
I ran circles faster and faster. A sonic boom shook the house, breaking everything that was fragile nearby. The house seemed to hold up, though, so I didn’t have to worry about the place crashing down on us.
Faster and faster I ran, my eyes focused straight ahead of me. The fire seemed to be receding back toward Brian, and his glow was diminishing. I thought it was working, but I was moving so fast, I couldn’t tell. To me, everything was slowed down.
I began to slow my speed, and things around me started to speed up. The flames sucked back inside Brian, and he stopped glowing. He fell to the ground, and I stopped running.
Most of the fire in the house had dissipated—only a few small ones remained here and there.
Brian’s body was black and covered in soot. Ash rained down on us, and the house groaned. I had to get him out of there and fast.
I picked him up and ran outside just as the house began to collapse on itself. I brought him out to the road where the fire trucks and ambulances were arriving.
I set him down on the curb, and people from the party rushed over.
“Stop! Give him some space,” I shouted. Everyone froze, staring at me. Seconds later, phones were out, flashes blinding my glowing eyes.
An unmarked van pulled up, peeling to a stop just a few feet away. The doors opened, and soldiers in black came pilling out of the back of the van.
“Everybody get down!” they shouted, waving their guns around. The partiers complied.
“Who are you?” I asked, struggling to see around the flashing lights from the different emergency response vehicles.
“We said get down!” one of them shouted.
“Look, I don’t know who you think you a—”
One of them fired at me, purple electricity shooting from his gun. I did a back flip off the ground, the electricity traveling just beneath me. I landed in a crouched position, and the bolt of electricity hit the house behind me, sending a section of it to the ground.
The whole team opened fire. I flew into the air, dodging each bolt of electricity with ease. But there were too many of them. I couldn’t keep my eye on every one.
“Kane, get out of there! Trust me, do it!” Samantha shouted at me.
I didn’t know what to do. I couldn’t leave my friends with these crazy people with the guns, but Samantha didn’t seem to think I could take them down.
I couldn’t give up. I began flying toward the company of soldiers, ready to take them down with ease.
Until one of the bolts hit me square in the chest.
I lost all control of my body.
I went rigid, and felt myself begin to fall toward the ground. I still had all of my forward momentum, however, and went flying straight through the second floor of the house across the street.
I slammed through the house, every hit sending shockwaves of pain through my body. Then I exited out the other side and slammed into the ground.
I lay in the backyard, broken. I couldn’t move voluntarily. My body spasmed as the electricity from the bolt continued to course through me. I felt it traveling through my head, down my arms, across my chest—in every fiber of my being.
It dissipated, and I lay there utterly motionless.
I felt my power returning. My body worked furiously to heal me.
I could hear the soldiers who had attacked me shouting orders to one another as they made their way toward the back yard.
I got to my feet, slowly—painfully.
The soldiers were close. I could hear them opening the gate leading to the back yard. Leading to me.
I jumped into the air and flew away, leaving it all behind.
17
Theories
I lifted the door to Samantha and Doug’s storage unit and shut it behind me. I stumbled to the big comfortable chair and fell down into it. Then I slipped my hood off and sank deeper into the chair.
“That hurt,” I said with a sigh.
“Looked like it,” Samantha said from behind her desk.
I looked up and saw that Doug wasn’t there. “Where’s Doug?”
“He went home. He has school tomorrow.”
I clenched my eyes shut and groaned. “So do I,” I said, telling myself that more than Samantha.
“How are you feeling?” she asked, shutting her laptop.
“Not the best. Do you have any idea how bad that purple stuff hurts? It’s not fun.”
“I can imagine,” she said, sitting back in her chair. “Looks like the government has another Super in their possession,” she added, referring to Brian.
“Yeah, and he’s my ex-girlfriend’s current boyfriend, and he also bullied me my entire life until I knocked some screws loose. Now he’s apparently the nicest guy ever.”
“Geez, tonight just wasn’t your night.”
“Not at all.” I sat up in my chair. “I’d better head home and try to get some rest before school tomorrow. What was that thing you wanted to tell me? Please say it has something to do with the government taking the Supers. I could really use some good news.”
Samantha sighed and searched the corner of the room. “Well…it depends on how you look at it. Doug and I were going over all the profiles of the Supers so far. One thing we noticed is that they all seem to be under the age of twenty-five. I mean, we can’t know for sure, but those that we do know about are, and from what we can guess from the others, they seem to be young.”
“That’s definitely interesting,” I said, standing. “How do you know it’s not just a coincidence, though?”
“It could be, but I doubt it. Twenty-five is the age when your brain is fully developed. We don’t know what brain development has to do with all of it, but we think it has something to do with granting us our powers. We’re just not sure exactly what yet.”
I mulled over that information in my mind. So the key to our powers was in our brains, somehow. At least, that was what I had gathered from Samantha’s theory. Although it was just that—a theory. Still, it was nice to have some sort of idea as to what was causing all of this. “I think we’re on the right track,” I said.
“Well, judging from the response time of that task force once Brian went all flaming, I’d say so,” Samantha said with a satisfied smile.
“What do you mean?”
“I think the government is figuring all this out too, so they’re either putting people in schools and colleges to keep an eye out for Supers, or they’re having students who are already there report any suspicious activity.”
I thought back to the party tonight. I didn’t remember seeing anybody there that I didn’t recognize, but then again, I had a bit of a one-track mind. “I’m pretty sure it’s the latter. I can’t be a hundred percent sure, though.”
“Well, in either case, keep an eye out. One thing’s for sure, and it’s that they’ve got their eye on Ebon High.”
I nodded in agreement. This new development wasn’t going to make my life any easier, that was for sure. “Speaking of which, I’d better get going. I’ve gotta think of some reason to tell Drew why I left without saying anything.”
“Just say you left after your argument with Macy,” Samantha said absentmindedly as she opened her laptop back up.
“What was that?” I asked. Had she been listening in on me?
Samantha stopped what she was doing, horror washing over her face. “I mean, I’m a
girl, so if my ex showed up after being gone for six months, it could only end in an argument, right?”
I eyed her suspiciously. “Right.”
“See? I’m pretty good at this girl thing,” she said with a self-gratifying nod.
I rolled my eyes. “Good night, Samantha.”
“Goodnight, Kane.”
I left the storage unit and began flying home to Indianapolis.
18
Speech Therapy
More rumors were spread the next day at school than the Monday after prom.
Everybody was talking about Brian and his superpowers. How long had he had them? Why had he used them at the party? Where had he gone?
The last one was the one that interested me the most. The official story was that he had been taken to the hospital and was recovering, but I knew that wasn’t the case. I seemed to be the only one, though. Even people who’d been at the party—including Drew—believed Brian was lying in a hospital bed somewhere, making a speedy recovery. Everyone thought the soldiers in black had been there for Tempest, not Brian. I knew that, really, they were just trying to get two birds with one stone.
It almost worked, too. I couldn’t stop thinking about how my powers had ceased to work for the few moments that the purple electricity was coursing through me. I was normal again. No longer Tempest, just Kane Andrews. It terrified me. I’d thought I had no weakness, but now I knew that that was no longer the case. And my biggest enemy knew that too.
As did the people whose house I’d crashed through, and the backyard I’d dug a hole in big enough for a new hot tub.
To make matters worse, that was Tempest’s big return. Cell phone footage from the party had leaked, and was being played on the news 24/7. It was all people were talking about. After his six-month absence, Tempest had returned to stop a high school party.
Okay, so that’s not exactly what happened. I did save who knows how many lives. Still, it wasn’t the grand return I’d expected, or wanted. I wanted something grandiose. I wanted to let people know I was back, and I wasn’t messing around.
The whole experience was definitely humbling. And it wasn’t over, either.
Because I was sitting at the kitchen table in my apartment in Indianapolis, writing out the speech Samantha, Doug, and I were going to record that night and post on the internet.
The Siege of the Supers (The First Superhero Book 2) Page 6