Not long after Band made himself comfortable in the most secluded corner that Quick Rise had to offer, the cafe’s front door opened with a perky ring of the attached doorbell to admit…nobody. Band blinked, then adjusted his gaze downward and caught a glimpse of pastel pink hair with frosted tips. The next moment the newcomer pushed through the queue of coffee-wanting customers lined up at the main counter and strode his way, prompting Band to straighten up and extend her a nod of acknowledgement. There was no need to wave her over; especially in a small building, it was impossible to miss Big Band.
Yayama looked surprisingly chipper, given the morbid events of last night. After what happened, he couldn’t have blamed her if she showed up bleary and bedraggled, shell-shocked and stumbling around like a zombie in a fatigue-induced stupor. Instead she carried herself with composure and confidence, the very picture of a seasoned, no-nonsense veteran, though to the sharp-eyed detective her appearance told a different tale. She might not be frazzled, but her unkempt hair was, and a number of tiny wooden shards and splinters clung to her garments. Dust and soot smudged not just her clothes, but also her forehead where she’d wiped sweat from her brow and her cheeks where her gauntlets had brushed them. Add in her comment over the linkpearl about still being in the Middle Tier, and it wasn’t much of a leap for Band to assume she’d spent the night at Banishing Flats, toiling to clean up the mess those Jack units made.
Though Yayama was a grown woman and probably didn’t want his sympathy, he offered her a sympathetic look anyway, one devoid of condescension. “Good mornin’,” he responded, pausing as she scaled the chair opposite him. He bit back a rueful smile that he thought she might mistake as amusement; she wasn’t the only one with size issues. Right now, Band wasn’t sitting on a chair so much as his own bell-shaped body, lowered to the floor behind the table with his legs retracted inside. Understandably, the chairs in Quick Rise hadn’t been made to accommodate heavy loads, and even if he somehow managed to fit four of them beneath him, they wouldn’t be strong enough to support his five thousand pound chassis.
He replied with a congenial smile when he heard her name. “Yayama, huh? The pleasure’s all mine, miss.” Although it had been a while now since he worked with Peacock, the gentle giant was well versed when it came to making friends a fraction of his size. “Me? I’m all there is of the most real. They call me Big Band.” Since Yayama hadn’t bought anything for herself, Band deployed a spindly mechanical arm to push his plate across the table. On it were simple cookies in a variety of shapes, each with a dollop of viscous strawberry jam in the middle. Of the seven Band had ordered, five were left. If the heroine didn’t want any, of course, she could just slide the plate right back.
A few minutes later, Kim and Harry arrived. In a coffee shop, positively buoyant with the soothing aromas of coffee beans, the lingering tarry waft of burnt tobacco on the latter’s breath made for a stark contrast. At least he’d managed to find some clothes after escaping from Banishing Flats in little more than his birthday suit, and practically anything was an improvement over the outfit he cobbled together in Martira. “Doin’ all right,” Band told Kim. “And yeah, hit me.” Kim succinctly explained what he’d gleaned about the tournaments, which confirmed some of Band’s suspicions but didn’t offer any new revelations. “Gotcha,” he replied. Between him, Harry, Kim, and Zenkichi, there were perhaps too many cooks in the kitchen. No case needed four detectives; at a certain point, the redundancy just muddied the waters. Of course, starting today they would be doing a lot less sleuthing and a lot more fighting. In the tournaments, they would definitely have strength in numbers.
Pit, Primrose, Therion, and Terry showed up next, and soon after they appeared, Band’s attention drifted to the wall-mounted TV set in Quick Rise. As it happened, a news station was covering the bombing of Banishing Flats last night. He hadn’t been able to identify those responsible himself, but evidently the perpetrators of the attack had been none too subtle, with the clearest indicator being the model of the robots they fielded.
G Corporation, Band mused. The company whose boss Ms Fortune stole from yesterday afternoon. At this point, the connection was obvious. Fortune herself probably knew it better than anyone, hence her continued absence. Of course, she hadn’t meant to put her allies or innocents at risk, and her only crime had been not knowing who she was messing with. Still, unless this was some kind of false flag operation, the feral bore a portion of the responsibility. He shook his head at Terry. “No word on Fortune just yet.” Immediately after, Pit then went on to assure Terry that Primrose had Fortune’s arm, which confirmed her survival. Looking a little sheepish, Band cleared his throat. “...I stand corrected.”
As the news story concluded, Band looked around to get a sense of what ordinary Esaka citizens thought. Bombings were a big deal, especially with confirmed casualties, and yet nobody in sight appeared to be especially concerned. Ignorance had been plausible until now, but even after being informed directly, the customers of Quick Rise just didn’t seem to care all that much. They just talked about tournament results, their favorite fighters, patch notes, a recent brawl in the Mid Tier between giant dragons, and of course the upcoming brackets. Band just stared in muted astonishment at the nonchalance that surrounded him, his brows furrowed. Were the people of Esaka really that desensitized to death, convinced by the city’s quick respawns that it didn’t really matter? Or was everything else, including the lives and deaths of fellow citizens, just background noise compared to their hyperfixation on entertainment? It was a worrisome and frankly chilling realization. If his chat with Zenkichi last night hadn’t convinced him that Esaka was sick, this definitely would have.
The appearance of Sakura and Amaterasu helped bring Band back to reality. Not even Sakura’s sunny attitude could dispel the cloud hanging over the table, though. She suggested that the attack could have something to do with Moebius, which had occurred to Band as well, albeit as a remote possibility. “Not impossible,” he allowed. “After yesterday, there’s no tellin’ how many people saw us. By now the consuls gotta have spies all over, watchin’ out for us.” He looked around the table. “Hmm…none o’ y’all actually mentioned the words ‘Seekers of Light’ to anyone yesterday, didja…?” By now, with seven people and one canine, the table was starting to get a little crowded.
It would continue to grow crowded, however, as more familiar faces showed up. The presence of Captain Pit was a given, and he’d expected to see Roland, Primrose, and Therion. Band was somewhat surprised, though, to see Junior and Rika again, having figured that the two would be off on their own adventures for the foreseeable future. They had missed the deadline for tournament registration, after all, so there wasn’t much that they could do in Esaka. Still, better to have the kids where he could see them than off getting into trouble somewhere, since their dad would come knocking sooner or later. Though now that Band could actually see them, he couldn’t help but wonder if Rika looked smaller than he remembered. If he recalled correctly, she was somewhere in her mid to late teens, but now she looked like a pre-teen. Shaking his head, Band wrote it off as him misremembering. When one stood as tall as he did, everyone else was just a different degree of small.
More importantly, the koopa kids came bearing important news. They reported the existence of a sword that could destroy Flame Clocks, as well as the possible location of the Source Engine, the database theorized by the Lost Numbers where everyone’s true essence was kept and copied. It was a lot to take in so quickly, but luckily it wasn’t exactly relevant at the current moment, so Band could put a pin in those thoughts in favor of chuckling at the nature of Galeem’s machinations. “Guess it’s true what they say: there’s nothin’ new under the sun,” he remarked. “Gotta admit, I wasn’t expectin’ our all-powerful light god to be so…derivative.” He scoffed. “Goes to show, ya can’t have an original thought in your head if ya ain’t got a head to begin with.”
He let Roland fill the kids in about the tournaments and the events of the prior night, focusing instead on his coffee and cookies. When Roland mentioned those responsible for the attack, he helped dispel a little more of the mystery, even if that news report practically confirmed it already. “G-Corp, yeah,” Band stated. “The real question is: why. If it’s ‘cause of Ms Fortune, we might be in the clear. But if that was just a pretense to kill us all off, our troubles have only just begun.” When Therion mentioned the operative of another possible party at the scene of the crime last night, things got even more complicated.
Before he could try and summarize the Seekers’ situation, the team captain tried to rally everyone. Having been about to say something more gloomy and ominous, Band smiled, humbled by the angel’s positivity. “That’s the spirit. If our enemies are already resortin’ to dirty tricks, it’s ‘cause they know they can’t beat us in a straight fight. We got this.” Sure, many of them had slept poorly, and some of them not at all, but saving the world was never going to be easy.
The minutes slipped by awfully quickly, and in no time at all, only an hour remained before the new tournament series was scheduled to begin. By the time the Seekers paid and stepped outside, some people were already on the move toward the Pools either to participate in the upcoming fights, or just to watch. Compared to Top 24 and especially Top 8, the Pools wouldn’t see much viewership, but there were still plenty of Esakans who wanted to watch lesser-known fighters in person before the pot monsters all got weeded out. Speaking of monsters, the city’s resident yokai had shown up as well. They gathered around benches, eaves, and street corners where faint, wispy channels of spiritual energy flowed, chatting excitedly. Soon these ethereal streams would be live, granting remote visions of random Pools matches to anyone who stuck their head in.
Right now, though, the populace was mostly focused on the bulletin boards scattered around the city. As Band watched, golden light welled up from the cobblestones and washed across the nearest board, becoming letters and symbols that revealed the long-awaited tournament brackets. It took a few minutes for him to puzzle it out, but eventually the bracket for the World Warrior tournament revealed that his own first Pools match would be against someone named Rasputin. This name meant nothing to him, of course, but some Esakans were so familiar with the tournament scene that they could start devising strategies against their prospective opponents on the spot. The bigger concern for him was that he would need to win
six fights over the course of the next few days in order to even reach Top 8, with even more battles awaiting him if he fell into the Losers’ Bracket, if he understood correctly.
The detective whistled. “Whew. Well…ready as I’ll ever be, I guess.” Each matchup had a number beside it, representing an arena somewhere in the Pools where the fight would take place. He and the others had an hour to get ready and get up to Esaka’s second tier, though how they spent it was up to them.
Though it was easy enough to throw in a smile, Nadia remained uneasy after stepping out onto the street from Annie’s apartment. The rational part of her mind, minute though it was, assured her that Kazuya and his minions couldn’t possibly know where she was, or they would have finished her off already. It insisted that they couldn’t do anything in broad daylight, with so many fighters around and the city’s defense system (those towering aurumatons) already on high alert. Yet, as reasonable as these notions were, they couldn’t quell the turmoil that bubbled up inside her, like a cookpot threatening to overflow. She couldn’t help but be reminded of the little motes of prismatic light that dotted that smoking ruin, of the people who died or nearly died because of her, and each pang of guilt hurt like a knife to the heart.
Her distress didn’t overcome her, but it did slow her down as the walked along the Middle Tier’s streets, enough that she fell behind Annie several times. The first time, her new friend stopped to wait for her, her manner patient even if her face looked irritated. The second time, Annie reached back, took her by the hand, and pulled her along. The third time, in front of a grocery store called Bread and Butter, Annie threw up her hands as she rolled her eye. “Alright, I give. If you’re gonna stay all mopey, I’m just gonna head to the dojo. Filia and Beowulf both need last-minute training anyway…”
“No, sorry, I’m just…” Nadia squeezed her eyes shut, shook her head, then opened them again. “Just a little distracted. I’ll be fine, okay?” She gave a carefree grin. “Fur real!”
Annie glowered. “Yuck. Quit it.” When Nadia stared at her, questioningly, the girl in green elaborated. “I’m an actress, remember? I’ve been around the block a few times, and I know a fake smile when I see it. Who’re you trying to fool?” The feral balked, recoiling as if struck, and Annie took a deep breath before crossing her arms. “Sorry. But look. It’s okay to not be okay. Who’d be okay after getting blown up and nearly losing their friends? But you’re not gonna feel any better if you bury your feelings behind a fake smile. Trust me on this one.”
Slowly, Nadia’s smile faltered. Her ears drooped, her posture worsened, and her gaze dropped to the ground. She looked miserable. She opened her mouth to say something, but no words came out, and she closed it again. She’d managed to pick herself up and leave Annie’s apartment with the help of a couple trite axioms, but now those feeble attempts at comfort rang hollow in her ears. “Ms Fortune is supposed to be unstoppable,” she murmured with a helpless giggle. “Heeehee…s-someone who springs up from every fall with a witty joke and a smile on her face. But…here I am.” She slumped down against the wall by the grocery store’s window. “That’s biggest joke of all.”
“We all wear masks from time to time.” Nadia looked up at Annie, who was staring off into the distance with crossed arms. Her face betrayed nothing. “It’s how we get through life. But we need to remember that we aren’t our masks. That human beings are way, way more complicated than that. And that’s fine.”
The feral slowly let her head fall, and rested it in her hand. A couple minutes passed. When Nadia looked up again, she expected Annie to be gone, but the girl was still there. She glanced down at Nadia, her expression nonplussed. “What? Got something to say? I’m not a therapist, you know, so I don’t have to sit and listen to you feel sorry for yourself. If that’s what you want, go pay someone to do it at Infinite Worth.” She gestured at a psychiatric office across the street, and did not flinch when the catgirl fixed her with an angry expression. “We don’t have all day. You gonna come find some clothes with me, or not?”
Chuckling, Nadia wiped her eyes and got to her feet. “Wow. You sure have a way with words. Maybe I will come, just to spite you.”
“Suit yourself.” Annie turned and marched off, and Nadia followed her, shaking her head. She wasn’t going to get over these tumultuous feelings of hers any time soon, but life had to go on. For now, with just this acerbic stranger for company, maybe it’d be okay to not be okay for a while.
The two spent another twenty minutes traveling through the Middle Tier. Nadia found herself on the receiving end of an unusual number of odd looks. In recent weeks, she’d become more accustomed to stares of astonishment and admiration thanks to her new looks, but now Esakans side-eyed her (and her stump in particular) like she was a freak. It seemed like Esaka wasn’t a place people expected to see physical disabilities. Pretty much everyone here was an able-bodied fighter, many with superhuman physiques; it was rare enough to even see someone who happened to be overweight, among women in particular. In such an environment, her missing left arm was apparently a strange sight. People didn’t point and stare -in part because there were so few children, young children especially- but the keen-eyed feral noticed nonetheless. Her first instinct was to not let it bother her, and to instead greet such stares with a cheerful smile. Instead, she let herself scowl at them. She wasn’t happy about it, either! As it turned out, getting upset felt pretty good, actually.
Eventually, she and Annie reached Button Check, and the two went inside. When she stepped in, Nadia was wowed by the rows and rows of clothing items on display, briefly stunned by both the quantity and variety. There were more shirts, shorts, skirts, shoes, and jackets than she could imagine, let alone want. Since this apparel shop stocked clothing of both contemporary and retro styles, pretty much everything was new to a scion of the art deco era. What drew her eye most, though, was the section labelled ‘Greatest Hits’. It seemed to offer whole outfits designed to mimic the iconic attire of famous Esaka fighters, many in different color variations, with prices that matched their jaw-dropping looks. Nadia marveled, wide-eyed, at the gold jewelry and black leather of
Dolores, two-time King of Fighters title holder, then considered the trendy baseball cap, tank top, and jacket of
Isla. When she came upon a familiar-looking combo of black leather jacket and blue chaps, her eyes lit up with recognition. “Ángel,” she read, instinctively pronouncing the name correctly. “So that was her name.”
“Hmm?” Annie looked over.
Nadia tapped the image of a
spunky luchadora attached to the outfit’s tag. “This chick. Way back in Carnival Town, I fus-” She blinked at Annie, who was still gleaming. “Uh, fought with her. Even picked up a couple of her moves! Better keep an eye on me in the tournament~”
Annie shrugged as she turned away. “Uh huh.”
Both quickly got distracted by an ad playing on one of the in-store TVs nearby. It was the debut video for a new fighter in the Tekken tournament by the name of
Miary Zo from a country called Madagascar. Nadia had never heard of it, which was to be expected really, but it did have impressively huge trees.
“Sure, I could tell ya I have the power of a fighting god,” she said, flipping around before landing in a cutesy monster pose.
”Or I could show ya with my fists!” She went on to summon effulgent blue snakes, a magical lemur tail, and a staff that she spun around like a dancer as she beat up a couple random people. “Wow, she’s pretty,” Nadia remarked.
“Pretty excessive,” Annie snorted, her arms crossed.
The catgirl gave her the side-eye. “Oh no, do you have a complex or something?”
“The ffff-UDGE are you talking about?” Seemingly unable to belt out an actual swear word, Annie turned away, annoyed. “Whatever. It’s gonna be a while before her outfit goes on sale anyway, so you’re gonna have to find something else?
Nadia looked farther down the King of Fighters row. “Hmm…oh! How about this?”
Annie eyed her suggestion idly. “Oh, that guy’s outfit? I never liked that creep…” She gave Nadia another look. “You could make it work. Maybe. You’d have to cut it up to work with your whole separation gimmick” She shrugged. “You could do worse.”
“From you, that’s high praise.” Nadia snickered, then went into the changing room to try it on. A minute later, she emerged dressed from head to toe in a black tie-up
onesie and donkey brown overcoat, her face obscured in the shadow of her hood except for the electric blue glow of her eyes. Somehow, the costume had tailored itself her body, so there was no question of it fitting or not–just if she liked the look. “I can slice the sleeves off, and turn the pants into shorts,” she said, examining herself in a provided mirror. “It’s perfect. The perfect look for my heel turn! What do you think?”
A very dubious look greeted her. “It’s great you’re feeling better already, but I don’t think you should romanticize this rough patch you’re going through…” she began.
“Say no more!”
Without further ado Nadia purchased the outfit and walked out in it, her borrowed clothes from Annie returned in projectile form. The Girl of the Stars followed her out, pinching the bridge of her nose as she shook her head.
While Sandalphon, Adam, and everyone else inside the stagecoach clung to the inner wall meshes for dear life, not at all eager to be bounced around or battered by loose cargo, the rest of the Seekers contended with the breakneck chaos of the hypertube outside. Once obstacles began to appear in their path, what had once been relatively smooth sailing turned into a mad scramble to avoid head-on collisions. The debris that cluttered the high-tech tunnel could more or less be dodged, jumped, flown over, or smashed through depending on the Seeker involved, so long as he or she possessed the requisite reaction time. Surviving the hypertube got trickier, though, when stretches of it devolved into a battleground where Naytiba minions and residual Orca robotics skirmished for control of the area.
Fortunately, the way corpses tended to disintegrate in the World of Light meant that Skullings rarely managed to infest host bodies, but the verminous cephalopods could still do some damage if they managed to latch onto someone. The bigger challenge turned out to be the airborne Cymuls, not because they strove to attack the Seekers, but because their metallic chassis were essentially silver wrecking balls that floated right in the travelers’ path, to say nothing of the buzz saws they became when they spun up their bladed legs for combat.
These troublesome machines certainly gave Heismay a rude awakening. Thanks to the strong air current in the hypertube, the hermit had been able to glide close to its center without much effort on his part, but when Cymuls began to appear, his lack of actual flight experience came back to bite him. Hasty attempts to swerve to one side or the other and avoid the chrome deathtraps resulted in panicked overcorrection, and after veering much too close to one side of the hypertube he could scarcely avoid swooping too far back the other way. He dared not slow down though, since the stagecoach behind him was getting closer all the time, and the last thing he wanted was to get run over.
Eventually, Heismay’s crash course in aerodynamics culminated in a lesson learnt the hard way: when he veered left to dodge a Cymul, which only he spotted in the nick of time thanks to its unmistakable metallic glint, his wing clipped a rogue cargo crate. “Gah!” Blindsided by the hit, he spun out of control, no longer flying but falling. The next second he hit the floor and rolled, bouncing several times. Luckily his lightweight body and solid bones meant that his tumble didn’t break anything, but after a moment it became clear that he wasn’t going to slide to a stop any time soon. Instead, thanks to the longsaber sheathed on his back, he got swept away by the magnetic field. Heismay zoomed through the tunnel like a turtle on its back, his limbs flailing in the air as he yelled.
Just when his initial terror seemed close to wearing off, and his slide about to stabilize, a glancing blow from some a ticker sent him spinning. “Bah!” Heismay gritted his teeth as the ticker blew up somewhere behind him, bending his arms down to try and seize some semblance of control with his claws fingers against the metal of the hypertube. In doing so, though, he saw more obstacles up ahead. At this rate it would be a full-on crash, with no chance of escaping the magnetic field in time. He could think of only one thing to try, and had no more time to think of something. “Here goes nothing!” In a flash of orange Heismay became his Assassin archetype, and not a second too soon. The Archetype’s large, sturdy metal form smashed through the debris with ease, prompting a profound sigh of relief from Heismay. As he evened out, he pressed his legs together and folded his arms across his chest, as if he were hanging upside down from a rafter, in order to ride the hypertube like a water slide. In that way he managed to shoot through the tunnel until the end of the hypertube appeared in the distance.
As the Seekers neared the end, barriers directed traffic away from the ceiling and walls and toward the floor, where several sets of slow panels with red backward-pointing arrows could reduce their velocity as the hypertube’s air current petered out. Anyone still in the air and above those panels would have to slow down via other methods, but at least the area beyond the exit seemed quite big. No longer cushioned by the magnetic field, Heismay exited the hypertube and quickly ground to a stop, sparks flying from where his Archetype’s armor met the ground. He reverted to normal the next moment, but lay there on his back for a little while longer, dazedly staring up at the dark, cloudy sky of the Frozen Highlands. The team’s wild ride was over, but it would be another minute or two before his heart finally slowed down. “...Well,” he croaked. “Twas much more than I bargained for.” He sat up at last, propping himself up with his hands. “Is everyone still in one piece?”
Eve walked his way, her concern evident on her face. The swordswoman had arrived first, and judging by her pristine condition she’d suffered no crashes or tumbles along the way. “I’m all good,” she reported, helping him up. “Though, I’m less certain about Adam and the others…”
After a quick look around, it seemed like everyone had made it through the hypertube intact, though precious few Seekers had made it unscathed. Some had made a solid effort to keep the stagecoach safe, but perfection was an elusive thing. One of the coach’s front wheels had disappeared at some point, and its armor took a few hits, leaving the once spotless black steel even more banged up than before. With the distribution of remaining wheels it could probably still travel, although with insufficient Reindrix to pull it along it wouldn’t be going anywhere fast now that it was back on solid ground.
As Heismay scrutinized the immediate area for enemies, and found no immediate threats, the stagecoach’s door creaked open. Sandalphon hobbled out with the aid of her gunstaff, sporting a couple fresh bruises. A quick look inside would confirm that some of the expedition gear and materials hanging from the wagon’s ceiling mesh had been shaken loose during the hypertube ride. Those loose objects now lay scattered around the stagecoach’s floor in complete disarray, along with Adam, who nursed a painful-looking bump on his head. A quick incantation of Angelic Praise from Sandalphon would remedy the pair’s injuries, along with any suffered by the Seekers outside during their tube ride, after which Sandalphon used External Information Network to the area. “No Naytibas nearby,” she announced.
“A welcome surprise,” Heismay muttered as he headed over. “Everything alright?”
The archangel’s pupils turned from radar scanners back to stress marks as she attempted to straighten her hair. “Can’t complain,” she lied. When Eve approached to check on Adam, she stepped aside to let her climb inside the stagecoach, then looked around.
According to the map she’d memorized earlier, the Seekers were now in the Space Logistics Complex, and what she now saw certainly fit the bill. It was a sprawling facility somewhere between a shipyard and an air cargo terminal, with giant cargo containers stacked high enough to form walls four or five stories high, complimented by dozens of heavy-duty cranes, lifts, and loaders. Beyond this freight depot lay the processing center, where everything bound for the space elevator would be loaded into a massive, labyrinthine auto-sorting system of conveyor belts, chutes, lifts, robot arms, and security laser grids. There was a
public access checkpoint on one side, where the people who arrived here by hypertube could enter the main facility while their luggage entered the cargo system, but in addition to a shut gate there appeared to be a
five lane gridlock blocking the gate, which would need to be cleared if the stagecoach were to go through. Over it all towered Raphael Space Center, tantalizingly close. Only by craning her neck now could Sandalphon peer up to where the space elevator disappeared into the clouds.
♫ “Right.” The archangel looked around. “Firstly, I imagine that everyone could use a short break after such an unorthodox method of travel. There are, however, several matters that require our attention. In order to continue progressing, we’ll need to open the way forward. A physically capable volunteer should rearrange the vehicles over there to make way for the stagecoach. I can investigate the checkpoint to see if it can be opened on this side, but if I am unsuccessful it may be necessary for a team to navigate the cargo system to reach the other side. Needless to say, I recommend avoiding the security lasers.” She then turned her attention to the Seekers’ ride. “We cannot neglect the stagecoach any longer, though. The wheels and armor require replacement and maintenance, respectively. And…the interior is a mess, as well. Edward.” Sandalphon addressed the team’s tactician directly. “Our coal and electricity reserves should be sufficient to utilize the technology gleaned from Whitey Hooten. It is up to you to design and manufacture new draft animals using the samples we’ve collected. Feel free to request additional help as you see fit. Whatever you do, stay alert. The Naytiba that attacked us is still alive, and it will attack again.”
As the Seekers began to disperse to attend to their various tasks, Adam remained by the stagecoach, perturbed. While Sandalphon’s miracle had restored him, the same couldn’t be said for the equipment he used to remotely control his drone, which the hypertube had jostled in transit. “It’ll be a little longer before my rig’s operational again.”
“I could accompany some of our new friends on another foray,” Eve ventured, her arms crossed thoughtfully. “But perhaps I should remain here this time, in case that Naytiba returns.”
Adam shrugged. “Suit yourself. Maybe there’s a can or two around here for you to collect.”
Eve’s eyebrows rose. “Ooh, maybe.” She took another look around. “Though, according to that message we received, Lily should be holed up somewhere near here.” The thought made Eve frown. “Hmm…with dangerous Naytibas around, we can’t very well leave her to fend for herself.”
“That’s true,” Adam admitted. “I’ll try and ping her. If I get a response, you’ll be the first to know.”
Eve nodded. “Thanks.”
Although a break sounded pretty good to Heismay, he couldn’t allow himself to rest when he spotted Sandalphon already on her way to the security checkpoint, all on her lonesome. He accompanied her the rest of the way as an escort, hopping between the roofs of the abandoned cars. Despite his new parka, he still found himself shivering when the chill wind picked up and flurries of snow blew around the Logistics Center. “It’s damnably cold,” he complained. “More so than this morning, I’d wager.”
“That would fit the narrative surrounding the Highlands’ eternal night, but for everyone’s sake I hope it is mere coincidence,” Sandalphon replied. Once she reached the security booth, she slipped inside to access the terminal.
Heismay, meanwhile, climbed up the structure until he reached the top of the gate. If the gate couldn’t be opened from this side, after all, what was stopping him, or one of the team’s fliers, from simply going over to access the far side? Once he crested the top of the wall, he got a clear view of the land ahead. The
area between the Space Logistics Complex and the Raphael Space Center was almost destroyed, with strange armored vehicles and blazing flames littered about, as well as some large holes in the roadway through which churning water was visible. Before he could see any gate controls on this side, he saw several red laser pointers that locked onto him from different angles as a half-dozen contaminated
guard turrets took aim. “Oh.” Heismay jumped down just in time to avoid the first magnetically-accelerated slug as it zoomed over the wall and slammed into the landscape behind where he’d been, violently exploding with enough raw force to blast an armored car to smithereens. The noise and shockwave startled a handful of
cone-wearing crustaceans that had been hiding out near the traffic jam, as well as a stocky
red-and-white bird rummaging through smaller packages piled by the cargo center.
As Sandalphon stared through the security booth window, eyes wide, Heismay dropped down in front of her. “We may have a problem,” he posited. When Sandalphon said nothing, frozen, he coughed into a balled fist. “Er…any luck with the gate?”
Sandalphon’s pupils turned from empty rings back to their normal power symbols. “No. Just a training program for document inspectors.” She gestured toward the computer screen, which displayed a
security simulation. “It does mention some sort of reward for trainees who perform well enough, but my time is better spent elsewhere.” With her task here concluded, Sandalphon exited the booth to return to the stagecoach and help reorganize its interior. Heismay followed, his gaze upward as he kept an eye out for any other guard turrets.