Meanwhile, back at the Tower… A Brief Respite

As October wound towards its close, and Astoria’s most popular holiday crept ever closer, the Vanguard found themselves in a bit of a lull. After the brief excitement of the bizarre entity known as Junkpile, crime seemed to take a hiatus in the City of the Future. Or at least super-crime did. E.V.A.L. was quiescent, the Yakuza were still laying low after their bloody jailbreak of the Steel Shogun, and the other criminal factions of the splintered Cabal had apparently put aside their rivalries, at least for the moment.

The presidential election was looming, and the fallout from the shocking revelations of widespread corruption involving Russian money, and the Russian attempts to influence the election, continued to reverberate across the country. Russian shills Trump, McConnell and a score of others in the House and Senate (from both parties) had been arrested, and most were still behind bars, being considered flight risks. The larger investigation continued, with new revelations and arrests almost daily. The NRA was imploding even as it tried to claw its way out of the foreign money pit it had dug for itself, and Ted Cruz had won the short, sharp fight to become the new Republican candidate for President.

The Russian scandal had so dominated the news cycles that the continuing influx of alien refugees from the shattered Confederated Union of Worlds hardly seemed to register. There were signs of that changing, however, as the desperate Republicans looked for something, anything, to divert American’s attention, fear, and anger away from themselves. Those scary aliens “invading” by the thousands on Star Island “just off our home shores,” seemed suddenly a godsend in certain circles.

But at home, the Vanguard did their best to enjoy the down time, and stay out of politics. To that end, Jonny had had a brainstorm.He ambushed Scion and Quanta just as they were returning from installing the last of the sensors around Chekovik’s Salvage Yard, so excited by his idea that he actually met them on the roof as they touched down.

“Hey guys! How’d it go?” he burbled. “Any sign of that walking trash heap? How was the flying, Quanta? Seems like you’re getting better at it.”

“Well, it’s still pretty tiring,” Quanta shrugged, smiling at the younger man’s enthusiasm, and a little touched at his interest. “But I do seem to be–”

“Yeah, that’s great,” Jonny interrupted, unable to contain himself. “Listen, guys, I’ve had a great idea! You’re always talking about team building, right boss? And doing stuff together outside of training and crime-fighting?”

“Yes, that’s true,” Scion began, his helmet melting into his armor. “It helps–”

“Well I’ve got the perfect thing!” Jonny blurted. “See, there’s this film festival happening Halloween night, at the New Camelot Theater, and it’s gonna be epic! See, the dude from that old Ghost Chasers TV show is putting together three of the best-of-the-worst horror movies with a bunch of comedians from–”

Jonny, slow down,” Scion said as they dropped through the flight hatch and into the Pyramid. “We’re just about to have the daily briefing, why don’t you bring it up there and we can discuss it. But I have to warn you, Halloween night is one of the busiest of the year for the APD, and I suspect it will be for us as well. So don’t get your hopes up.”

To Scion’s surprise, it was Artemis who most strongly endorsed Jonny’s plan and insisted that the entire team should attend the show. The hyper-enthused Blue Flame had made his pitch to the gathered teammates as soon as the few items of real business had been taken care of, to general approval.

“It’s gonna be great, it’ll be sort of like Mystery Science Theater 3000, but live and with real comedians doing the roasting. Miranda Cho’s gonna be there, she’s hilarious! I got an e-mail invite the other day, and when I checked into it I talked to Randall Fox himself, and he offered us front-row seats!”

“Isn’t he that guy who had the ghost hunting show on the CW a decade ago?” Chilz asked. “I thought he was all washed up, after those disgruntled ex-employees proved that most of his “supernatural” stuff was actually just practical special effects.”

“Yes,” Artemis agreed. “I met him seven years ago, when he and his crew were filming an episode of Ghost Chasers in the Undercity. I… was not impressed. He caused a great deal of unnecessary disruption to the denizens of that hidden community. I was not surprised when the scandal that brought him down broke, two years later.”

“Well, yeah,” Jonny hastily went on. “But he did have some real supernatural encounters, even the guys who ratted him out admitted that. And he’s trying to make a comeback, I think, as a comedian this time. And anyway, this is a benefit for the theater, raising money for its renovation fund. He set it up, it’s called Laugh at the Reaper.” He rolled out a poster on the table. “It’s gonna be webcast live around the world!”

“Ah, is it that time again?” Artemis asked, with one of her slight smiles. “Every thirty years, like clockwork, they refurbish and remodel the “New” Camelot. Which is a little more expensive these days, I suppose, since it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places back in the ’90s.” She got a distant look in her eyes for a moment. “It was originally a vaudeville house when it first opened in 1897, did you know? They converted it to a movie house in 1927… the first of its many renovations over the years, and how it acquired its Art Deco look.”

“Well, it sounds intriguing,” Prometheus offered. “As long as they are not presenting another of those ridiculous interpretations of my father’s life story. I’m still figuring out your concepts of modern humor… this might be good research, if nothing else.”

“You know, I’ve seen Blood Like Wine before,” Chilz put in. “It really is hilariously cheesy. This sounds like fun. But didn’t the star, Lauren Hammond, turn into some sort of super villain?”

“Not a super villain, exactly,” Artemis sighed. “She died in obscurity, after a disappointing career of typecasting, bitter and resentful. Her spirit, however, lived on.” At Quanta’s uncomfortable stirring across the table she raised a deprecating hand. “Whether it was supernatural, some sort of psychic resonance, or something else altogether, the fact is Lauren Hammond’s “ghost” caused several real deaths amongst those whom she felt had wronged her in life.

“She became known as the Silver Scream, and the original Red Racer, of the Liberty League, was the one who brought her first reign of terror to an end. But the… phenomena… returned more than once over the years, always seeking vengeance for perceived wrongs or slights… and causing real deaths.”

“Oh, that’s all ancient history Artemis… C’mon, I bought tickets for us all, its my treat. What do say, guys?” Jonny looked around the table hopefully.

“That’s very generous of you Jonny,” Scion said. “And I appreciate your stepping forward like this, being proactive and all. But you know that Halloween is this city’s Mardi Gras, and it’s likely to be a busy night for us as well as the police. I don’t think the entire team can take the night off and be unavailable for six hours… not with the new meta presence in the city.”

“Actually,” Artemis said before Jonny could react. “I think it is an excellent idea. And I think the entire team should attend… I believe it will prove to be an excellent team-building event. I’m sure that Paragon and a few of the other Changlings will be willing to take up the slack for a few hours.”

“Sure, if we can get him away from all those Incident groupies,” sniggered Chuck, elbowing Jonny in the ribs. Blue Flame grinned back, shaking his head ruefully. Why wasn’t he that lucky?

“The what, now?” Scion queried, looking puzzled.

“It is what the press have dubbed the young women (and men, to be fair) who have shown a predilection for pursuing sexual encounters with the new meta-humans created in the Astoria Incident,” Totem explained. “Actually, I believe it was Meg who first coined the term.”

“Yeah,” Jonny sighed. “And that bastard Paragon has more than his fair share falling all over him, that’s for sure! I can’t even get a date. It’s not fair!”

“Well, he is a very well-looking young man,” Artemis said primly. “But I’m sure he can manage to escape his amorous pursuers long enough to deal with any trouble that may come up on Halloween night.”

She gave JJ an inscrutable look, and he shrugged. “Well, I guess it’s settled then. The Vanguard is going to Laugh at the Reaper!

“Yee-haw!” Jonny shouted, pumping his fist. “Now, about costumes…”

♦  ♦  ♦ 

Quanta, Scion and Artemis remained after the meeting, and as soon as the door had slid shut behind the last of their teammates, JJ and Kyle both turned to look at their friend.

“What gives, Jane?” JJ asked bemusedly.

“Whatever do you mean, John?” Artemis countered innocently. “You know I love the old classic horror movies… the cheesier, the better.”

“Mmm-hmm,” he eyed her suspiciously. “And I know you hate the modern slasher shit that passes for horror these days. But I doubt you’ve taken a Halloween night off in… rather a long time. So why now?”

“I’d guess that she expects Lauren Hammond’s “ghost” to make an appearance,” Kyle suggested, rolling his eyes. “What hogwash.”

Kyle, whatever it is, the Silver Scream is very real,” Artemis replied, turning serious. “You can look up the past incident reports in the SHADE files yourself.”

“I know,” Kyle sighed, tapping his keypad irritably. “And I did. I just refuse to believe that she’s an “unquiet spirit from Beyond.”

“Whatever she may be, she’s dangerous and deadly, and this whole ill-conceived affair seems almost designed to attract her attention.” Artemis frowned. “I don’t know what that idiot Fox is thinking… is he trying to draw her out? Why? Or is he really just too stupid to realize what he might be provoking?”

“From what you’ve said of him, I’d guess the latter,” Scion said, scanning through the files on his own screen. “But it has been over a decade since the last incident with the Silver Scream. Maybe that last fight with the Liberty Alliance really did banish her, or destroy her, or whatever…”

“Perhaps,” Artemis agreed. “That’s the one thing that makes me doubt my concerns in the matter. But if anything is likely to revive her “vengeful spirit,” it will certainly be a crowd of people publicly mocking Lauren Hammond and her work before a live, world-wide audience. So better to be safe, and prepared, than not.”

“Should we alert the others to this possibility,” Quanta asked, frowning at the blurry image of a translucent gray woman floating in the air in Grauman’s Chinese Theater in 1973. God, he hated the so-called supernatural.

“I’ll speak to each one separately, to give them a warning,” Artemis said. “But if my fears are unfounded, it would be best if the outing remained a simple social event for the team, rather than a formal mission.”

“Agreed,” Scion said, and the meeting was adjourned.

Conspiracies Unmaksed!

“Director Comey is not happy, Captain Astor!” FBI Special Agent Albert Johnson slammed down a copy of the Oregonian on Scion’s desk, jabbing an accusing finger at the front page headline. “This is classified information, and someone on this team leaked it to the press!”

JJ glanced down at the headline in question and the ghost of a smile flickered briefly across his lips. Trump prostitution tape shocks nation, GOP silent as campaign scrambles for response. “Agent Johnson, if that video is classified now, it certainly wasn’t when we handed it, and all the other evidence of the Russian conspiracy, over to you people two days ago. You can’t post facto criminalize its release… and even if you could, do you have any proof that this came from the Vanguard and not your own agency? Or from the Justice Department? Or SHADE?”

“No one at the FBI, or at Justice, would jeopardize a case of this magnitude!” Johnson barked, his face darkening. “Even those cowboys at SHADE wouldn’t risk that!

“And the release of that video may well alert the principals in this investigation, which is only just getting started, that we have more evidence of their conspiracy, allowing them to destroy further evidence or to flee our jurisdiction!”

“Oh bullshit,” JJ said, the incipient humor dropping from him at last. “I’ve done little else the last three days aside from analyzing and absorbing all the data we unlocked from that Russian hard drive. The documentary evidence is overwhelming all on its own, and should be enough to secure criminal convictions against scores of Russian agents and their American pawns, as well as bring treason charges against a dozen US senators and twice that number of congresspersons… plus Trump and most of his campaign staff.

“Tell me, Agent Johnson, have you actually read all of the evidence contained on that drive? Do you understand how widespread and deep this Russian infiltration runs in our government?”

The FBI agent, looking slightly poleaxed, deflated a bit as he sat back in his chair. “Well, no, obviously not – I understand there are thousands of pages, much of it in Russian, and hours of video aside from that damn “pee tape.” Our analysts are still going through it all, but I know the Director has been very much on top of it… he himself gave me summaries to read before sending me out here… although I didn’t realize… is there really evidence of senators and congressmen under Russian control?”

“How much control the Russians have over their puppets, how much influence they’ve actually been able to wield, will be up to the courts to decide,” JJ shrugged. “But, yes, over 30 members of congress have been compromised, either through the millions of dollars illegally funneled to them, or outright blackmailed, like that moron Trump – never mind his sexual perversions, his ties to Russian dark money and his laundering of Mob money has had him in their pocket for years.

“And the Russians funneled even more money through NGOs to influence American policy and elections, especially the NRA and several companies that manufacture voting machines. Then there’s the Russian government-backed hackers who’ve infiltrated and manipulated social media everywhere in the West. Believe me, Agent Johnson, no one in the Vanguard wants to see any of these people escape justice.

“But we also don’t have complete faith in our government’s willingness, or ability, to pursue this fully. The desire to whitewash and cover up is strong in Washington, and this scandal is going to rock our system to its foundations. We both know that there are a lot of people, even ones un-compromised by foreign powers, who’d like to see the status remain quo and will be pushing to see it all played down.

“Which is why the Vanguard has kept our own copy of all the Russian data we recovered. I understand that your visit today is because Director Comey is eager to ensure that no more information is “leaked.” And it won’t be, not from us, as long as the investigation moves forward – expeditiously, let me add – to arrests and trials.”

“It’s not your place to dictate to–” Johnson began, his momentary shock giving way once more to anger.

“I’ve already spoken to both AG Lynch and the President,” Scion interrupted him smoothly. “As we are effectively US Marshals, the Attorney General is the Vanguard’s boss, and the President is hers… and both understand the necessity of making sure this rock is completely turned over and all the things crawling under it are exposed to the light of day. As long as the Director keeps that in mind, there should be no conflict between us, yes?”

Disgruntled but unable to do anything about it, Agent Johnson eventually made a clipped goodbye and left the AzTech Pyramid even less happy than when he’d arrived. JJ smiled after him and returned to his computer display and the next batch of Russian documents it had translated for him… a particularly disturbing piece on how few voting machines, in how very few congressional districts, would need to be hacked to swing a presidential Electoral College victory without raising undue suspicion…

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

Later that day, at the usual Friday weekly round-up meeting of the Vanguard, JJ described his morning visit from the FBI and the concerns of its Director.

“I don’t know which of you leaked that tape,” he concluded. “And I don’t want to know. But let me make it very clear that no other information will be given to the press without the consent of the entire team – Comey is not wrong in being concerned about the potential for some of these bastards to wriggle away if things aren’t done properly. So no more unilateral actions on this matter. Is that clear?”

With wide-eyed innocence everyone around the table nodded, and variously voiced their complete agreement with the order, and their shock, shock I say, at seeing that disgusting tape released to the public.

“Although,” grumbled Chuck once everyone had settled back, “I’m more shocked that Trump’s poll numbers haven’t taken a bigger hit! I know the mainstream media won’t play most of the tape without blurring the relevant bits, but the uncensored version has had millions of hits online, despite the game of whack-a-mole the social media companies keep playing with it –”

“Yes, well, as I said, that’s politics and we’re staying out of it from here on out,” JJ interjected. “So, moving on to new business, I see that Phantom Ace has a report for us on an encounter last night at a chop shop in the Outer Peninsula. Gideon would you –”

He was interrupted by the sudden blare of the alert klaxon, the flashing red bars that appeared on everyone’s computer screens, and the booming voice of dispatcher Angela over the speakers.

Vanguard, this is Dispatch. We have a Code Red Emergency! Repeat, Code Red! A civilian jetliner is in distress off the coast.”

Cosmic Fallout

The immediate aftermath of the Second Astoria Incident, as the press was soon calling it, took a full week to wrap up. But its repercussions would continue to echo for years to come, both on Earth and in the wider galaxy.

As soon as the authorities arrived to secure the site in Cathedral Park they confirmed to the Vanguard that Nemesis had, indeed, hijacked every television frequency on the planet, as well as the Internet itself, to broadcast the events on Halicon and in the park to the entire world. In the weeks to follow this would prove to be an inextricably linked mess of both blessing and curse.

On the one hand, it raised the profile of the team to heights of world-wide fame that rivaled that of the Liberty Alliance. On the other hand, a small but very vocal minority lambasted the team for “making decisions for the entire world” on their own initiative, while others somehow blamed them for “letting” Zybon learn of Earth’s existence. The armchair generals and morning after quarterbacks became an intense media focus for awhile, although the Vanguard did their best to stay above the fray.

Mostly.

When he was ambushed during a morning show interview a week after the Incident, Chilz “lost his cool” (as numerous media outlets gleefully punned afterward, endlessly), and laid into the smarmy Barbie-doll host with the unlikely name of Kiwi Sherman, with both barrels…

“Who are we to decide the fate of the world?! We were the ones on the ground, in the moment, and if we didn’t have the “authority,” we sure as hell had the responsibility! You parrot Nemesis’ claim that we doomed Earth by refusing his “gift,” but we all know that if we had allowed him to unleash a world-wide repeat of the first Astoria Incident you’d be sitting here accusing us of gross incompetence and calling for our heads on a platter. Assuming you weren’t one of the billions of people dead or horribly mutated, of course.”

No one on the team disagreed with his sentiment, and if he’d stopped there everyone would have called it a success. Unfortunately, he went on to mock the woman mercilessly, starting with her well-known anti-vaccine beliefs and ending with accusing her of being a Flat Earther. Unsurprisingly, the rest of the media focused mostly on the insults and the resultant tears, burying the legitimate argument.

Eventually the furor died down, and the debate receded to the usual background levels of conspiratorial incoherence and illogic on the lunatic fringe. The argument, by those who feared and hated metahumans, that the Vanguard hadn’t allowed the whole human race to be turned into metas was unsustainable for any but the most extreme denizens of the rabbit hole – there were always people who bought the theory that you had to burn down the village to save it.

But the justified fear that the destruction of Halicon engendered in the population was less easily laid to rest. For the first 72 hours after the world-wide broadcast of the horrifying murder of a world, spontaneous riots and other panicked reactions rocked many cities on Earth. From desperate runs on stores and banks to the irrational protesting of angry crowds picketing outside the Union embassy in New Atlantis, many people seemed to lose their minds.

Oddly enough, Astoria proved relatively immune to these transports of excess. There was concern, certainly, and fear of what might come, but no riots and no great rush to stock up on survival supplies. This later was perhaps due to the uncharacteristically sarcastic commentary by KLEC Channel 12’s beloved anchor Caleb Gardner the day after the Second Incident, when he wondered how many Haliconians survived the complete disintegration of their planet by having enough bottles of water, freeze-dried food and extra-thermal sleeping bags.

When it became clear that neither Entropy nor the Harbinger Fleet were going to make an immediate appearance in the skies over Earth, things began to return to normal. People started cleaning up the several billion dollars in property damage they’d caused, and the news cycle slowly settled back into its usual rhythms. The stunning fact that failed businessman and reality TV shill Donald Trump had become the Republican nominee for president, which had happened just a few days before the Second Incident and then been overwhelmed by the larger news, again dominated the media hive-mind.

On a more personal level, the individual members of the Vanguard dealt with the shock of witnessing the death of almost 10 billion people in their own ways. Scion and Quanta threw themselves into studying both the Nemesis’ armor and Alvaro’s matrix shard, looking for clues to leverage the advanced Seeker technology into a defense against Entropy (and against Nemesis, which seemed the more likely threat, at least in the short term). Work on the armor was done alongside government scientists and Vitruvian of the Liberty Alliance, but the research into the shard was a strictly Vanguard secret.

Artemis dove back into street-level work, both as Jane Valentine, PI and in her heroic guise. A century and a half of war in all its forms had inured her to much, but she found herself deeply disturbed by the destruction of Halicon, and she wasn’t sure why, beyond the obvious. The low-life elements of the city soon found their own angst increasing tremendously as she worked out her uncertainties on them.

It may have been a small thing in the context of the larger tragedy, but one of the things that most bothered Artemis was the fate of the Haliconian mentat, Ella-Va. She had felt the other woman being torn from her grasp just before they found themselves back on Earth, and was sure she’d been saved from the destruction of her home world. But where was she?

When she heard reports of a green-skinned woman fleeing from a hostile mob in Prague two weeks after the Second Incident, Artemis knew she had to check it out. Taking Phantom Ace with her, she shadow-stepped to the capital of the Czech Republic. In less than a day they had tracked down the mystery woman to her hiding place in the catacombs of the old city. It was indeed Ella-Va, but a confused, frightened and amnesiac woman, rather than the heroic mentat they remembered.

Fortunately the medical facilities in the AzTech Pyramid and the psychic powers of Totem’s avatar Raven were enough to restore her memory fairly quickly. Which was no real blessing, as she was forced to re-live the destruction of everything she’d known and loved… for several days she refused to leave her room as she processed her grief.

While Chilz’ own internal emotional turmoil seemed to come out mostly as a shorter temper and minimal patience for idiots, he also seemed to become more focused on the practical aspects of his chosen heroic career, working harder than ever to hone his combat skills. He continued to enjoy his celebrity, but seemed more serious about using it for furthering good causes. And if anything, his explosion on Good Morning Astoria only seemed to increase his popularity with the media.

Phantom Ace and Blue Flame seemed little changed by their experience, at least outwardly. But both spent more time talking with each other about the events of that day, as well as with both Artemis and Chilz. They also proved instrumental in the efforts to bring Ella-Va out of her shell, once she emerged from seclusion. The two delighted in showing her all the wonders of Earth, from its natural beauty to its best video games.

Totem spent a great deal of time with Meg in the days after returning to Earth, and shared every detail of his experience with her. She had seen much of the action, of course, along with everyone else on the planet, but his revelations moved her empathic nature deeply. She quickly realized that the story of Halicon needed to be told more fully.

With Cooper’s permission, even encouragement, she interviewed the rest of the team, individually and together. But it was her long sessions with the recovering Ella-Va that turned the resulting article from merely an interesting account of the battle as seen from the heroes’ point of view into a devastatingly emotional glimpse into the last hours of a world.

The story was picked up by the national media, which in turn led to a call from Manga-Tor, the Union’s ambassador-observer to the United Nations of Earth. For weeks the ambassador, mired in his own shock and grief, had been rejecting all media calls for personal interviews. The embassy would issue curt updates on events in the Union as they learned of them, but nothing more. Until the Ambassador read Meg Halcyon’s story.

He was so moved by her words that he had his office offer her the opportunity to come to New Atlantis for a one-on-one interview. Louise Lancaster, the aging ace reporter for the Daily Star and the Ambassador’s long-time favorite Earth writer, was also invited to the meeting. At Manga-Tor’s request the two woman joined forces to write an eight-part series that vividly brought to life the people, history and culture of his dead home world.

The series ran in mid-August in both the Daily Star and the Oregonian, running from Sunday to Sunday, and thereafter appeared in hundreds of other papers around the world. The impact of the story was immediate and intense, and it may well have played a pivotal role in creating the largely sympathetic public reaction to the first wave of Union refugees that arrived on Earth in early September.

With the destruction of the capital world of the Union, their enemies, especially the Stellar Protectorate and the Dramorg Consensus, had moved at once in an attempt to overrun and dismember the confederation. If the Grand Chancellor, Senate and core governmental structure hadn’t survived and successfully relocated to Kaldoryn, the oldest of the Union’s colonies, it’s likely they would have succeeded. As it was, fully a third of the Union fell to one enemy or the other, with minor border states like the Kash’rodan Empire picking off a handful of border worlds for themselves in the chaos.

Tens of thousands fled from the conquered worlds while they could, many taking refuge on planets still held by the Union. But some of those thousands, thanks to the fortunes of atsrography and spurred on by tales of her legendary heroes, made their way to Earth. While the UN dithered, with damaged ships and dwindling supplies escalating the crisis in orbit daily, President Obama acted unilaterally and granted the galactic refuges temporary asylum in the United States.

To contain the problems associated with this move, Vitruvian and Urbana repurposed the abandoned Space Control facilities on Star Island, several miles off the southern coast of New Jersey, into a holding and processing facility for alien immigrants. By mid-September over three thousand aliens were being housed there, while the governments of Earth debated the planet’s official policy.

The presence of so many aliens, so close to the East Coast, naturally sent certain groups into the stratosphere, stoking wild fears of invasion and cultural destruction in the wake of this “alien army.” Obama’s decision quickly became a major point of contention between the candidates in the US presidential race, with Trump feverishly decrying the “swamping of our borders by an alien horde of monstrous murderers and space-rapists” (although he did backtrack so far as to admit that he “assumed some were fine creatures”) and Secretary Clinton urging calm and suggesting a measured response to the crisis was both called for and in keeping with cherished American values.

Prior to the sudden arrival of the galactic refugees, in early August, JJ Astor VIII’s company, Apergy Systems International, acquired most of the physical and intellectual assets of the now bankrupt ZeroPoint Energy Corporation at auction. On 26 August, while going through one of his new warehouses, JJ came across an old crate… it contents eventually turned out to be the Vanguard’s newest member, Prometheus.

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

Monday, 3 October 2016, was an unusually sunny and warm day for fall in the Pacific Northwest. From the Assembly Room in the AzTech Pyramid Mt. Defiance stood brilliantly white in its new coat of snow against a pale blue sky, and the glass towers of downtown Astoria glittered. Scion had just finished welcoming Prometheus to his first meeting as an official member of the Vanguard. After appropriate applause and welcomes from the others, and seeing that there was no old business to cover, he asked the table for any new business.

“Well, my sources in Chinatown have given me an interesting little bit of intelligence,” Artemis offered. “It seems that a package recently arrived in the city from Russia, a package greatly valued by the Russian Mob. My sources didn’t know the exact nature of this package, beyond the fact that it’s apparently easily portable. They know that much because it was stolen two days ago, right out from under the Russian’s noses.

“The value can be guessed at by the level of rage the Russian’s are exhibiting in the aftermath of the theft. They have put a bounty of $1,000,000 on the head of the unknown thief, dead or alive, as long as the “package” is returned with the seal unbroken… and they’ve gone so far as to let it be known they’ll even pay the thief him- or herself the bounty IF they return the item in the same condition.”

That brought surprised looks from many of the others. As a group they’d had little interaction with the Russian Mob since the Vanguard’s formation, but they knew from Artemis and Scion’s individual run-ins about the Russian crime family’s reputation – dangerous, ruthless, and absolutely unforgiving of any slight or perceived wrong done to their honor. For them to essentially offer to be held up for a ransom…

“They must really want that thing back,” Jonny said. “Even if they don’t intend to keep their promise to the thief, they lose face just making the offer. Wait, you said your tip came from Chinatown – aren’t the Russians based more in the Outer Peninsula, especially around the docks?”

“Very good, Jonny,” Artemis said approvingly. “Yes, they are, and my tip didn’t come from anyone in the Russian’s orbit – although a few of them confirmed the details when I… questioned them about it. No, my tip is from someone in the Takazumi-gumi.

“That’s the ruling clan of the local Yakuza,” Jonny explained in an aside to Prometheus, who was scrolling through his PADD, obviously trying to keep up.

“Yes, thank you,” Artemis said, and Jonny clammed up as she continued. “My source claims that the Steel Shogun has bid $10 million for the “package,” sight unseen. The exchange is supposedly going to happen this afternoon in an empty condo in the McDonald Tower.”

Everyone except Prometheus turned to stare out the windows and down at the building in question, a 46-story cylinder of blue reflective glass sitting not 600 feet to the southwest of them. Quanta barked out a laugh.

“Well, you’ve got to give the man credit, he does seem to have actual balls of steel,” he said, half admiringly. “Pulling off his big buy within spitting distance of Vanguard headquarters!”

“Well then, maybe we should demonstrate to him the folly of such arrogance,” Scion said, smiling cooly. “And put those balls in a vice. What else can you tell us about this deal, Artemis?”

Meanwhile, Back at the Tower… What the Hell Was That?!

With the vanishing of the alien and his spacecraft, the silence of the ocean suddenly seemed immense. Even the creaks and splashes of the still-settling ruins of the Porpoise Mount Research Station seemed muted and far away. For a time no one seemed willing to speak.

“I’m quite certain that was the alien criminal, and renegade former-Paladin, Ebony Night,” Artemis finally said, breaking the mood. “I had heard he left Earth years ago, after his last big fight with the Alliance. But it seems he’s back now, and aligned with whomever was behind the Astoria Incident. If that was a chunk of matrix crystal—”

“It was,” Scion assured her with a sigh. “My sensor readings were off the chart! I wouldn’t have thought there was that much matrix crystal on the whole planet. If this —”

He was cut off as a groggy Kid Singularity groaned and tried to sit up.

“What – where… where am I am? Why am I on an iceberg in the middle of the ocean? Why am I tied up?!” His reedy voice started out confused and was edging quickly up into panic, but his wide-eyed stare as he took in his surroundings was clear – the milky sheen that had previously filmed his eyes was gone.

Artemis quickly bent to reassure him and to cut the zip-ties that bound his wrists and ankles. They currently had no means of truly restraining him when he was conscious, and she was unwilling to beat or shock him into unconsciousness. He seemed to shrink away from her, intimidated and wary. But then his eye caught sight of the Blue Flame hovering overhead and he suddenly grinned.

“Hey, Jonny!” he called rubbing his wrists and scooting a little away from Artemis. “That was so cool when you revealed your secret identity at that press conference yesterday! You really blew their minds, man!”

The Blue Flame, sensing a fan, dropped down to the ice floe, converting to human just before his feet touched the ice. “How you doing Chris? Nice to formally meet you!” He offered his hand and the kid enthusiastically extended his own.

“Wait, you know who I am?” he asked, suddenly looking worried.

“Yeah,” Jonny said with a shrug. “But don’t worry, you’re not in trouble… and we’ll keep your secret if that’s what you decide you want. Also… that press conference wasn’t yesterday – it was over a week ago.” He then proceeded to answer the confused teen’s questions about what the hell was going on.

Once her teammate was engaged with Kid Singularity, Artemis had moved off to free the reviving Ghostlight, who was looking as dazed and confused as her former “partner.”

Artemis!” The girl clearly remembered their encounter two weeks earlier, that was good. “Where are we? What’s going on? I- I don’t… remember… how I got here..?”

“It’s alright, Cassie,Artemis said soothingly, putting an arm around the girl’s thin shoulders. Despite the Goth/piercings/rainbow hair look that shouted “keep away,” the girl leaned into the older woman’s offered comfort.  “It’s a long story, honey but you’re safe now and I’ll explain all that I can. Do you remember anything from the last 10 days?”

But before Cassie could do more than frown in thought, the low hum of approaching helicopters broke the oceanic silence. The sound quickly grew to a roar, and in a minute they could be seen, coming in fast from the east – three Apache gunships and a large transport chopper, all with the black and silver colors and markings of Underhill-Hart. There was no more time for questions then, as the helicopters moved to circle around the two ice floes and the hovering Interceptor.

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

The Underhill-Hart reinforcements were led by a strikingly handsome woman with mocha skin and short dark hair, who introduced herself as Agent Blaze once the situation was made clear and everyone’s bonafides confirmed. Like her counterpart, Agent Mariner, she wore a variation of the usual Underhill-Hart uniform – a red, yellow and orange flame motif over the usual black, running from her ankles up her sides and from her shoulders to her wrists.

It quickly became obvious that she had a lot more than good looks and a snazzy uniform going for her as she organized the transfer of her people, both the wounded and the hale, to the transport, and dispatched teams to assess the damage to the research station. She also offered the Vanguard the loan of power-dampening restraints, a raised eyebrow her only critique on finding that the heroes didn’t have any aboard their own aircraft.

Crux was restrained before he regained consciousness, which left him only able to vent some truly memorable and unique invective at his captors. After a few minutes of this Agent Blaze added a sonic gag to the loaner equipment. Chains, like the others, was now free of Nimord’s mind-control, and again allowed herself to be bound, not meeting anyone’s eyes and saying nothing more than a muttered “sorry” occasionally.

Paragon seemed torn between glee at being in any way involved with the Vanguard, and chagrin at having been a mind-controlled puppet, once Phantom Ace filled him in. Of all the enslaved Changelings he seemed to have retained some awareness of what had happened to him. While his memories were disjointed and fragmentary, he did have at least a sense of the last three days.

There was little time to question him just then, however, with the arrival of the Underhill-Hart reinforcements. He tried to jump in to lend a hand with the evacuation of the wounded mercenaries, but was soundly rebuffed by their comrades – they might understand that he’d been mind-controlled, but that didn’t make them particularly forgiving of the injuries he’d inflicted. Seeing this rejection, Artemis asked him to stand guard over Crux and Chains, which seemed to brighten him up some.

Agent Mariner, once Agent Blaze had assumed command of the rescue operation, took to the water to search for the missing Washout. Able to breathe underwater and to swim at 120 mph, with greatly increased skin density, he was apparently the result of an otherwise failed military meta-human development project. Scion joined him in the search, as did a thrilled-to-be-let-out Orca.

“Try to keep up,” the ex-soldier said with a rare smile as he dove off the Interceptor. Orca laughed out loud and followed him smoothly into the water, while Scion took off like a missile. But despite their best efforts, including Orca’s heightened olfactory tracking abilities, the trio could find no trace of the rogue meta-human.

As the rescue operation began to wind down Agent Blaze asked the Vanguard for their version of what had happened at Porpoise Mount, for her official report on the action. The Vanguard had a few questions of their own…

Meanwhile, Back at the Tower… A Brief Respite

It was late afternoon by the time the Vanguard returned to the Pyramid, having finally wrapped up the last of the bureaucratic details with both the APD and SHADE concerning the morning’s jail break. New power dampening equipment had arrived from Portland, a full investigation by both agencies was underway, and Agent Stark had promised to keep the heroes informed of the results.

“Hey, what’s going on down there?” Chuck asked, as the Interceptor slowed to enter the rooftop hanger. “Looks like quite a crowd…”

Several of the others peered over his shoulder at the screen showing one of the exterior cameras. Numerous vehicles were parked in front of the building and scores of people were bustling in and out… a quick zoom showed most of the them to be caterers.

“It is the preparations for the AzTech anniversary party,” Artemis said distractedly from up front, where she was deeply engaged by whatever she was reading on her PADD. “You all received invitations last week, hand delivered by Álvaro.”

“Yes,” added JJ, from the pilot’s seat. “And we all agreed we would attend, as a group and in costume… I’d still prefer to go as a civilian, but with so many secret IDs, it’s the only fair solution. And Álvaro seemed pretty keen on it, too.”

“Ugh, I’m pooped,” Gideon groaned. “Is there any way to get out of this?”

“The party doesn’t start until 18:00,” JJ shrugged. “Plenty of time to get cleaned up and refreshed. But if you’re really not up to it, it’s not like this is work related, exactly. Good press is always welcome, but I’m sure we can swing it without you.”

Once the Interceptor was docked and powered down, everyone headed for their quarters and a hot shower. As the others loaded into the elevator JJ gestured to Artemis and the two of them stepped aside.

“What’s got you so enthralled?” he asked. “You hardly said anything on the ride home.”

She gave him a raised eyebrow and a sardonic look. “John, the ‘ride home’ took slightly more than three minutes. And I believe I actually spoke more than you did in that time.”

“True,” JJ laughed. “And it only took that long because I had to slow down getting her into the hanger. But you know what I mean, Artemis… for the last hour at Police HQ, while Agent Stark was going over the kids’ field reports and correcting their grammar, you were deep into that PADD. What’s so interesting?”

“Not so much interesting as worrying,” she replied, handing him the PADD. “I was scanning the SHADE archives, looking to confirm a suspicion.

“I believe the mystery man who ran rampant through the jail today, the one we never saw, was an international assassin named Shadowson. His true identity and origins are unknown, and even his past activities are hard to track with certainty, thanks to his ability to blind both human and mechanical eyes – he can be very hard to see when he wants to be, and he somehow never shows up on cameras.

“Many of his abilities seem to come from the Blade of Shadows, a legendary blade from Japanese history. I know where this blade was once kept – indeed, I had a chance to claim it as my own, once upon a time – but that was… a number of years ago. Shadowson also seems to have other more-than human abilities, not to mention very substantial fighting skills of his own.

“For more than forty years he has operated almost exclusively in Asia, where it is rumored to be leading part of the criminal organization known as the Phoenix Wind Triad. If it was him today, this is the first time he has operated openly in the United States, and I find that worrying. The Phoenix Wind Triad has long been a rival of the White Tiger Society, the leading Chinese crime organization here in Astoria. With the recent incapacitation of Kirin, the head of the White Tiger Society, leaving at least a temporary power vacuum in the Society, I fear this may be the opening move of a hostile takeover – which would not be good for the city.”

“Yes, I can see why you were so engrossed,” JJ said, scanning the all-too-scant information in the SHADE file. “Did you mention this to Agent Stark?”

“I did, and she agrees it is very likely that today’s mystery killer was Shadowson. But as we have nothing to go on, beyond the obvious E.V.A.L. connection, she advises patience.”

Not having a better option to offer, the two parted, each to their own quarters to get ready for the party.

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

Shortly after 18:00 the Vanguard stepped out of their private elevator and into the massive open atrium of the AzTech Pyramid. After a long shower and a brief power nap, Gideon had decided he could handle a party after all, especially once he’d learned that Álvaro had engaged the top food carts in the city to cater the event. Two of his favorites, Salad Salad and Crazy Burrito, were in the mix, so Phantom Ace would be there!

The seven story atrium, including its two mezzanine levels, was packed with hundreds of people – not only AzTech employees, the last group of whom had made the move into their new offices today, but other business bigwigs and, of course, the press. Tables were scattered about, and the food cart vendors had set up stations all around the vast open space and on the two u-shaped upper levels that overlooked the main floor.

A small stage and podium had been set up in front of the 40-foot waterfall that cascaded into a pond along the central section of the north wall, but so far no one was up there. The crowd broke into applause as the group entered the main lobby, and for several minutes there was a great deal of handshaking and autograph signing. But eventually the heroes were able to more-or-less mingle.

Totem quickly spotted Meg Halcyon, and she broke away from her fellow journalists, with whom she’d been chatting, to join him. He soon found them a relatively quiet corner to eat their fusion burritos and talk… it had been three days since they’d last seen one another, and he was more than a little surprised at just how much he’d missed her.

Artemis and JJ joined Mayor Syrett and her chief of staff who, after a brief synopsis of the day’s events, determinedly turned the conversation to lighter topics, such as the upcoming annual Sound and Fury music festival. Apparently Snotty Nose Rez Kids, the hot new Native hip-hop superstars, would be wrapping up the festival on its last day, and kicking off their first world tour at the same time.

Chilz, Blue Flame (in his human form and sporting his new mask), and Phantom Ace dragged one another between their favorite food cart vendors, piling up plates of fabulous food and raving about it to anyone in earshot. This inadvertently gave a big boost to several of the more obscure carts, as the press made note of the heroes preferences, and word spread throughout the atrium.

Quanta had started out with JJ and Artemis, but he had soon noticed John Quest and his husband, and had made a beeline for them. The two scientists were soon deep in discussion about the latest theories in nano engineering and the possibilities of Project Odyssey opening up space to the human race. Hadji eventually wandered off with a smile, knowing the two would be at it until it was time to go home…

Eventually someone, somewhere, remembered that this was a corporate event, and the speeches began. First up was Germain HolfstederÁlvaro de la Vega’s vice-president of Human Resources. Once he had everyone’s attention, more or less, he launched into his speech.

“I’d like to thank Astoria’s new heroes for attending our little celebration, particularly after what they did for the city today. But as AzTech employees, I think we all know there’s another hero in the room, a man who has done a lot of good not just for us personally but for all of Astoria— not to mention the technological gifts his brilliance has brought to the world.

“He threw this party for us, to celebrate both the 25th anniversary of the company as well as the completion of this beautiful new headquarters, but I hope we can also consider it to be a party where we can take a moment to appreciate him, and invite others to do the same. To that end, I and the rest of the AzTech executive board have arranged a little surprise – a small museum dedicated to the man, located just off this lobby.

“He’s the founder and president of AzTech, and he’s my hero: ladies and gentleman, Álvaro de la Vega!” The atrium erupted in almost deafening cheers and applause as de la Vega stepped up to the dais.

“Thank you,” the billionaire said, once the noise began to die down. “Thank you all. I see they’ve called the museum ‘The Álvaro de la Vega Story’. I won’t keep you from your well-earned celebration for long, except to tell you that my story so far is merely a prologue to the one we will write together, here in this tower. My past is past, and in time what will truly be important is the AzTech legacy. Each of you will be just as important a part in that as I. So thank you all, for the work you’ve done, and for the work you will do as we fly into the future together.”

True to his word, Álvaro kept it short, and as he stepped away from the podium a jazz band swung into a song, and the party kicked into high gear. De la Vega remained on the stage, speaking quietly with his company executives and top scientists.

Totem and Meg decided to check out the new museum, and wandered through the small but very well designed area off the main lobby, trying to decide if it had really been a surprise to Álvaro, or if it was his own ego-stroking idea. The low lighting accentuated the spot-lit cases containing photos and memorabilia, and a large television screen on the long wall looped a professionally-produced documentary…

Álvaro de la Vega was born the only child of a lawyer and a high school music teacher, both Astoria natives. A bright and studious boy, de la Vega graduated high school at 16, at the top of his class, and earned a doctorate in Engineering from CalTech by the time he was 20. Pursuing childhood dreams that cast his vision toward the stars, de la Vega worked at NASA for several years, before founding his own tech company, Vega Electronics, here in his home town—where he soon began leap-frogging rivals such as Intel in IC manufacturing.

When bitter rival Harlan Technologies went bankrupt in 1988, de la Vega seized the day – using money inherited from his recently deceased parents, he purchased the bankrupt company’s assets and used them to expand his own company, renaming it AzTech International in 1991, the company we know and love today.

De la Vega’s innovative ideas, previously stifled under government and banking conservatism, now had a chance to flourish. Six months after its founding, AzTech released its first non-IC product: photoreactive dyes that allowed the creation of AzTech Programmable Paint, first adopted for military camouflage but quickly embraced by the world of fashion and consumer products. It was only the first of a dozen breakthroughs, from adaptive polymers to piezoelectric ceramics—most coming directly from the mind and private laboratories of Álvaro de la Vega—that have made him not only the richest man in Astoria but one of the richest men in the world. Still wary of management and investors, de la Vega has remained in firm control of his company, even as it has grown to become the largest employer in not only the city but the state.

As AzTech prospered, so to did Astoria! As the fortunes of AzTech rose, crime rates in its home city fell until Astoria had one of the lowest crime rates in the country. From the Astoria Orchestra and the Pacific Museum of Art to Safe Harbor shelters for the homeless and Open Door community centers, AzTech and Álvaro de la Vega have supported every aspect of life in Astoria and helped it to be named one of the best places to live in the United States! While superhumans were making headlines in places like New Atlantis, de la Vega famously declared at the opening of the 2011 Astoria Bicentennial Expo that “in Astoria, we can be our own heroes!”

But now the Astoria Incident has forced superhuman powers, and the chaos that comes with them, upon the people of his city—and once again Álvaro de la Vega has stepped forward to help, to see that this newfound power is used responsibly! The top floors of this very building—once intended for de la Vega’s’ personal offices—have been graciously donated to a new team of heroes who have dedicated themselves to protecting Astoria and the world. Now the Vanguard join AzTech high atop the Pyramid, keeping a watchful eye on the city they love, and guiding it into the future!

“Well, that was… interesting,” Meg said, as they strolled back out into the main lobby. “I still don’t know if he knew about this beforehand or not.”

“No, I’m not sure either,” Totem agreed. “And I’m not sure how I feel about that last bit, conflating the Vanguard with —”

At that moment all hell broke loose–

Meanwhile, Back at the Tower…

SCION
It had been a long day, and JJ was glad to settle down in his favorite chair in front of the fire and unwind with a glass of the good bourbon. Two major fights, and one of them with the actual Liberty Alliance… and then Álvaro de la Vega’s bombshell offer! His mind was almost as exhausted as his body, but there was no way he was getting to sleep right away… he kept playing the days events in a loop, especially the last several hours…

Once Raptor had cleared up the strange misunderstanding that had lead to the fight with the Alliance members, and gone off to talk in private with de la Vega, JJ had given every appearance of being distracted by the banter with Sure-Shot and Red Racer; but he had no intention of being left in the dark about whatever the hell was going on. Phantom Ace had a similar idea, it seemed, but subtlety was called for and JJ had little confidence in the younger man’s skill in that area.

Artemis,” he said over the comm-link he had given her that morning at Police HQ. “I think young Roland is planning on some impromptu eavesdropping – could you –”

But of course she had already spotted the kid’s move, and was in place to lay a hand on his shoulder as he tried to sidle away from the group. Once she had dissuaded him from his attempt, she’d nodded to JJ and returned her attention to the conversation. God knew, the East Coast heroes seemed to be sincerely trying to make amends for the earlier contretemps, but JJ was only half listening, letting the others carry the conversation.

He was much more focused on the tiny bug he had sent flitting after Raptor and de la Vega, which was transmitting their conversation back to him from the conference room the two had stepped into.

“– if Nimrod is involved,” Raptor was saying as the bug got within range. “Jetstream thought it best that we check in on you, under the circumstances.”

“How thoughtful of the old coot,” de la Vega had replied, an underlying annoyance edging the usual humor in his tone. “I can practically feel the love from here.”

“Spare me, Álvaro,” the younger woman had sighed. “You know it was a perfectly logical inference to draw, under the circumstances. So no more dancing around it – did you, in fact, have anything to do with this so-called Astoria Incident?”

All trace of humor had dropped from de la Vega’s voice then. “Elizi- Raptor… I swear to you that I had no prior knowledge of the Incident, no hand in it at all, and what little I know now comes from the media, my sources in the city government, and especially that new group of heroes outside. I’m as concerned about this as anyone – whatever else, you know I love this city. My intentions are strictly honorable. Which I hope to prove, in fact, once we rejoin the others.”

There had followed a moment of silence before Raptor spoke again. “I believe you, Álvaro. And to be honest, I don’t think even Jetstream really thought you had anything to do with it… but it would have been irresponsible not to check. We just didn’t anticipate… whatever it was that happened here today. Do you think any of these new heroes had anything to do with Urbana going off like that?”

“I seriously doubt it,” he replied. “Nothing in their known power sets would suggest it, except maybe for Totem, and he was busy controlling Toby once the shit hit the fan. In any case, Urbana seemed to think I was responsible for whatever was happening to her.”

Another moment of fraught silence, then his exasperated voice once more. “And no, I didn’t do anything to the damn Spirit of the City!”

After that the conversation had moved on to what little de la Vega knew about the Astoria Incident, including the Vanguard’s revelation about the matrix crystals. Raptor had little to add from the Liberty Alliance’s side – the event seemed to have blindsided them as much as everyone else. They were worried about an explosion of new metas, but relieved that a new team seemed poised to handle things in Astoria.

“You know as well as I do that this version of the Alliance just isn’t… what we used to be, once upon a time. On top of that, we’re spread too thin right now, given recent events both at home and off-planet,” Raptor had concluded. “Most of what we have in the way of big hitters are in space right now, in fact, which is why they weren’t here today. It’s good to know we won’t have to expend too many resources keeping a lid on Astoria. Assuming this new team of Astor’s holds together, of course.”

“Speaking of which,” de la Vega had replied, humor returning to his voice, “let’s rejoin the party, and I’ll see if I can lay everyone’s lingering worries to rest…”

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

ARTEMIS
Artemis
was going over the days surprising events herself, relaxing in the giant spa tub that was one of her few indulgences in life. Showers were certainly a great invention, and a boon when one was in a hurry, but she had always had a soft spot for the sybaritic luxury of soaking in steaming hot water. A legacy of her Reconstruction-era upbringing, no doubt. There were people who had learned of this minor vice over the years, but her love of the bubbles remained a closely held secret.

She needed the bath tonight, she thought, as the water jets massaged her body and she began to truly relax amidst the bubbles. It had been awhile since she’d been in that kind of meta-human fight, never mind two in the same day, and even her amazing constitution didn’t prevent the lactic acid buildup in her muscles… though she did recover quicker than most.

A hand snaked up from the cloud of bubbles to snag the bottle of Ninkasi Ground Control Imperial Stout from where it stood sweating on the edge of the tub. Taking a long swig, she stared into the darkness beyond the circle of candles around her, and contemplated Álvaro de la Vega’s astounding offer…

When Raptor and de la Vega’s had returned from their private conversation, which Scion had shared with her over their secure comm-link, Artemis had been curious what new surprise the billionaire was poised to spring on them. Several possibilities had occurred to her, but what he actually had to say caught even her off guard.

“I know every one of you here came to me today with the idea that I might have had something to do with the Astoria Incident, and I hope I have convinced you all that I am not in any way responsible for this horrific occurrence. If there are any lingering doubts, perhaps what I’m about to suggest will help alleviate them.

“For the last several years I’ve been working on putting together resources for a team of hometown defenders for Astoria. Given the historical lack of heroes in the city and the presence of organizations like the Cabal, E.V.A.L., and now whoever or whatever is behind the Incident, I’ve felt for quite some time that we needed our own dedicated city defenders.

“I was planning on beginning a recruitment drive in just a few weeks, if fact, seeking appropriate heroes for this hypothetical “dream team”… but then you all showed up, just when the city needed you most. I can take a hint when Fate whacks me upside the head with one. So, I’d like to donate the resources I’ve already gathered and use them to get all of you set up with everything you’ll need to be fully effective as the Vanguard. I have connections in the city government; you’ve already been temporarily deputized by the APD; and with the Alliance’s help dealing with SHADE, I believe we could have things up and running in short order.

“I’m sure that Captain Astor’s facility is very nice, and adequate for the emergency needs of the moment, but I doubt he really wants to turn his company’s offices into the headquarters for a superhero team. However, my people have been working on just such a space in the top floors of my new AzTech Pyramid, complete with the very best technology I could put together — my own cutting-edge stuff, in fact.

“I’ve been thinking about this for some time and I’ve spoken with the local authorities in general terms. They’ve had mixed feelings about an organized group of heroes taking up residence in the city, but Mayor Syrett in particular has been at least open to the possibility. I think now, with the chaos caused by the Incident and the sudden influx of new meta-humans, any real resistance to the idea will pretty quickly vanish.

“Rome wasn’t built in a day and all that, but I have every confidence SHADE will come around after the Alliance puts in a good word and you’ve spent a little time talking with them. We’ll need their buy-in, of course, but given recent events I don’t see that as being a problem… If anyone had any doubts about your dedication or abilities, your actions since the Incident should certainly have eased them. I know there’s still a lot of details to work out, but what do you say? Are you in?”

After a moments silence, suddenly everyone seemed to be talking at once. The Liberty Alliance members had seemed generally enthusiastic and the younger Vanguard were definitely into the idea. As most of the heroes had gathered around Álvaro and began peppering him with questions, which he had enthusiastically answered, Artemis had stepped back from the crowd. Raptor and Scion had followed and the three had spoken quietly for a few moments.

“What is your assessment of this offer,” Artemis asked Raptor bluntly. “Clearly you had doubts about de la Vega, or you would not have come here today.”

“Doubts? Not exactly that,” the hero had replied, frowning. “But Álvaro has… a history with the Alliance. He is also one of the most brilliant minds on the planet. It seemed prudent to check in with him regarding an event of this nature right on his own doorstep. But I believe him when he says he was not involved.”

“I am not inexperienced in the art of separating lies from truth,” Artemis said. “As you know. I, too, have come to the the conclusion that de la Vega has been telling the truth regarding the Incident. However, I also believe that he is not being entirely forthcoming with us… I am just unsure in what way, or its significance. But I may be letting my fond memories of his… family… influence me, and so my hesitation.” John had given her an odd look at that last, which she blandly ignored.

“Heart rate, respiration, galvanic response, some other stuff my tech can measure,” Scion had said with a shrug, “all lead me to conclude that he’s been truthful… but like Artemis, my gut says he’s hiding something.”

Raptor actually smiled at that. “Well, it certainly proves you both have the instincts for this job. Without a doubt Álvaro is keeping secrets – he has always played it close to the vest, its in his nature – but I think, as far as his offer to sponsor your team goes, he is completely sincere.

“That’s not to say some of his other secrets might not rear up and bite you on the ass someday, of course. So caution is most certainly called for. The bottom line with Álvaro de la Vega? Trust, but verify. That’s the Libery Alliance’s position with him, after all.”

On that somewhat ambiguous endorsement the three had rejoined the larger group. After a few more minutes of discussion and good natured horseplay between some of the younger heroes, Raptor declared that they needed to get Urbana back to the Overwatch and figure out what was wrong with her. Good-byes were said, heartfelt apologies reiterated, and assurances of no hard feelings were given. As the last light of the setting sun glinted on the Pegasus spaceplane, it had shot up almost silently into the darkening sky. In seconds it was gone.

“Well, I know you need time to think about my offer,” Álvaro had said once the Liberty Alliance was gone. “But maybe seeing what that offer actually entails would help. Construction is almost competed on the AzTech Pyramid – my company will be moving our official corporate HQ into the building in a few weeks – just as well I suppose, after today’s events. It’s going to take that long to clean this mess up.” He’d gestured at the remains of his office and the torn up landscaping outside.

”So, why don’t we pop over to the Pyramid now and take a look at what your futures might hold? The night is young, after all!”

A few glances between the members of the Vanguard had produced a consensus in short order. “We’d be happy to see what you’ve got,” Quanta said, speaking for the group.

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

QUANTA
Stepping out of the shower, Kyle worked the thick towel vigorously across his back and neck, giving sore muscles some extra attention. The long, hot shower had helped, but he was still feeling muscles he hadn’t even known he possessed. Actual fighting was a lot different than practicing… and absolutely nothing like fencing! He was going to need to work on that, and maybe work on some combo moves with his new teammates… he’d already had a few thoughts on that, during the day’s two (two!) battles… and one of them with the goddamn Liberty Alliance! True, they may not be the legendary team they were back in their heyday, but that name was still one to conjure with!

Shrugging on his robe, he grabbed a La Croix from the beverage fridge in his bedroom, and stepped out onto the balcony. From this side of his penthouse condo he could see the AzTech Pyramid rising above the other skyscrapers of downtown. The exterior lights were off, of course – they wouldn’t be lit until the official opening – but several floors showed interior lights where crews were working around the clock to put the finishing touches on de la Vega’s latest creation. It was strange to think that he might soon be spending much of his time at the top of that building, now the tallest in Astoria (and the state, come to think of it).

He had offered to open a quantum portal to Defiance Plaza when Álvaro made his offer to show them the headquarters on offer. He hadn’t yet had a chance to show off that particular ability; and truth be told, he was still a little frustrated that he hadn’t been able to summon a portal during the fight. So the universal reaction of amazement when he opened the shimmering quantum tunnel, connecting the torn up courtyard with the heart of downtown, had been pretty gratifying.

Álvaro de la Vega had been the first one to step through, with a sigh and some muttered words about pomegranates, while Artemis had brought up the rear. “Very impressive, Kyle,” she had said quietly, when it was just the two of them. “I am uncertain of how my cloak will react to this form of teleportation, however, so I hope you will not be offended if I make my own way this evening?”

“Oh, no, of course not,” he’d replied, a little flustered. How did she manage to be so intimidating, just standing there? “Something we should test, but you’re right, now’s not the time.” She’d nodded, giving him one of her enigmatic smiles and, stepping back into the shadows, had vanished. It wasn’t until he was about to step through the portal himself that it suddenly hit him that she had used his real name!

Shit, was she telepathic on top of everything else? She was spooky enough as it was. Then he’d shrugged and stepped through, letting the portal collapse behind him. What the hell, he’d known he probably couldn’t keep his identity a secret, at least from his teammates, not once he’d agreed to be a part of the Vanguard. But he really needed to find out how she’d known, if for no other reason than to guard against others learning his secret the same way…

At the southern end of Defiance Plaza, which many considered the heart of old Astoria, the others were waiting for him. Including Artemis, who returned his searching stare with another faint smile and a tilt of her head that said “another time.” De la Vega was gesturing them all onward, into the vast atrium lobby of the blue glass pyramid which soared over the plaza, and he let it go. For the moment.

The AzTech Pyramid was the tallest building in the city now, surpassing the previous record holder, the 62-story Medallion Insurance tower, by 18 floors. Four tiers of dark blue glass, each one sloping gently inwards, brought the total height of the building to 905 feet, not counting the communications mast. The base of the tower was a square 360 feet on a side, with the roof of the highest tire being 65 feet square. The building was so large that it spanned parts of two blocks, with Emerald Avenue running beneath the building itself and through its upper sub-levels.

“That blue “glass” covering the building is actually a polyceramic-glass composite,” Álvaro had explained as he led them into the 8-story atrium of the main entrance off the Plaza. “It’s several times tougher than concrete, and totally polarizable – thus the transparency can be controlled, from entirely see-through to completely reflective, on one side or both. Most of the building is hard-set to about 50% reflective transparency from the outside, with individual floors or sections able to alter the interior transparency from 100% down to 10%.

“The material is also energy-conductive, meaning the entire surface of the building acts as solar panels. The energy is collected and stored in a series of massive batteries in the central core. In fact, those are Apergy System batteries, custom made for us by your company, Captain Astor. Even my R&D people couldn’t come up with a more efficient storage system.”

“Yes, I’m aware,” JJ smiled somewhat sardonically. “I actually designed them myself… as I recall, your requirements were somewhat unique. I was also intrigued by this solar panel glass of yours. I believe our lawyers are still in discussions about ASI licensing it for use in my Third World Independence Kits.”

“Well, I’m sure you and I can expedite that once things settle down,” Álvaro said as he led them to the central elevator banks. “Now, the main bank of elevators runs from the sub-basements up to the 70th floor, and can stop at any floor between; this smaller bank opposite runs  up to the 75th floor. But this elevator,” he motioned them towards a set of elevator doors set apart from the others and at a right angle to them, “is different. It starts in the deepest sub-basement, a level unreachable by any other elevator, stops here at the lobby, and then not again until the 71st floor. The public elevator banks only go to the 72nd floor – access to floors 73 through 80, and the roof, is only possible via this elevator. Oh, and the public elevators skip the 71st floor, which is a structural barrier of sorts between the upper section and the lower parts of the tower. Among other things it holds a swimming pool and, I’m thinking, general athletic facilities… something I’d welcome your input on.

“So, let’s start the tour at the top,” he finished with a grin, “and work our way down, shall we?”

They all stepped into the the spacious, rather high-tech looking elevator, and Álvaro leaned in to let a lens in the control panel scan his retina. “If you end up accepting my offer, we’ll have your own retinal patterns added to the access list, of course.”

The ride up was surprisingly quick, giving the billionaire time for only a few more factoids about his “baby,” such as total square footage and, at Quanta’s question, the staggering cost of the structure. Kyle was certainly wealthy, and he suspected Astor was even more-so, but de la Vega was in a class so far beyond them both it hardly seemed right to call them all “rich.”

At the 80th floor they had stepped out onto a wide steel-mesh catwalk overlooking a large open area, clearing occupying both the 79th and 80th levels. The slightly inward-sloping windows/walls were set to almost complete opacity, giving only a hint at the night-time cityscape beyond. “This,” Álvaro said with a grand gesture to the open space before them, “is the hanger deck.”

In the center of the open floor below them, which was approximately 70′ x 50′ Kyle estimated, was a large… vehicle, he supposed he’d have to call it, at least until he learned more. It looked like a cross between a space craft and a speedboat…

“And that is the XJV-7,” Max had declared proudly. “It’s an experimental aero-space vehicle, designed by myself and the top engineers at Jordan Aircraft, in a joint venture. If you accept my offer, it will become the Vanguard’s primary transportation, able to reach anywhere on the continent in under an hour, safely submerge to a depth of almost a mile, and reach near-Earth orbit. In fact, it could probably reach the moon in an emergency, although I couldn’t recommend trying it. Stick to visiting the Liberty Alliance at the Overwatch— that’s easily within its reach.”

“OK, I have to see this,” Kyle had burst out, slipping past Álvaro and down the stairs to their left, which lead down to the hanger floor, Scion hard on his heels. The two exchanged enthusiastic grins and headed for the entry ramp that was open at the rear of the craft… only to step through the ramp as they tried to mount it. The whole ship flickered momentarily, then steadied.

“Er, sorry about that guys,” Álvaro called down to them, his face actually reddening a bit in unusual embarrassment. “This is just a holographic image of the real thing… I had my boys set it up this afternoon, in case you accepted my offer. The real deal is sitting in a secure hanger at Jordan Aircraft. Sorry, I should’ve figured you two, at least, would’ve been keen to actually check it out.”

Disappointed, the two heroes had had to settle for grilling Álvaro about the specifications of the amazing-sounding craft, and the conversation had quickly descended into highly technical jargon. The three of them might still be happily at it if the others hadn’t made their boredom with the tech talk very clear. With a promise of a visit to the Jordan facility as soon as possible, Álvaro had reluctantly resumed the tour.

“Below and behind us, on the Hanger’s deck level, are the maintenance and repair facilities for the XJV-7 and the sky-cycles.” He gestured to a row of what looked like a cross between a motorcycle and a snowmobile, but with neither wheels nor skids. “Personal anti-grav sleds, for those without flight powers, when the need arises.

“Behind us on this level you’ll find the control room for the hanger deck, as well as a ready-room, with lockers, toilet facilities, and connections to the central comms array on the roof. Now, let’s continue on to the next level…”

On the 77th floor the elevator doors opened on the opposite side, onto a 12′ wide corridor, walls a soothing light gray, the floor covered in the same yielding, high-tech material as the hanger deck, but in a deep shade of blue. Álvaro immediately turned left on exiting the elevator, leading them to a formidable vault-like door. After another round with a retinal scanner and a tapped code the door slid quietly open to reveal an empty space about the same size as the hanger above.

“This is your state-of-the-art training facility,” Álvaro said, his grin widening. “Not much to look at, you’re thinking, right?” When the others agreed, his grin widened and he pulled a small PADD from inside his jacket and tapped out a few keystrokes. Suddenly the group found themselves on the roof of the Western Empire Hotel, the city laid out below them in twinkling lights. A strong breeze off the ocean stirred Artemis‘ cloak, and carried the smell of salt, car exhaust, and the faint noises of rush-hour traffic.

“What the hell –” started Phantom Ace, going insubstantial, while the Blue Flame shifted to plasma and took to the air. Dr. Froth was suddenly surrounded by a haze of his multicolored bubbles. Kyle had half been expecting something like this, however, and he didn’t think Scion or Artemis were particularly surprised either. He had a hard time reading Totem, but his visible reaction was limited to a raised eyebrow.

“A holographic projector, I assume,” Kyle had said to Álvaro, walking over to rap on an air conditioning unit nearby. It felt solid, but the expected metallic thump sounded slightly off to his ear. “With directed forcefield projectors and tactile feedback as well, I see.”

“Exactly!” Álvaro had laughed. “And a few other high-tech tricks I and my R&D boys have come up with… or “stole” from the Liberty Alliance and the Sampsons in  a few cases. A dozen different weapons platforms can simulate almost any kind of attack, while a massive computer array can simulate almost any environment, for the most realistic training exercises this side of reality itself!”

With a few more taps he caused the city view to vanish, and cycled through five more scenarios, from the Undercity to the surface of the moon. It really was a massively impressive achievement, and Kyle couldn’t wait to get his hands on it to program his own scenarios… he could almost see the same wheels turning in Scion’s head, and even Artemis had appeared to be impressed – she had actually admitted it could be a useful training tool.

“Yeah,” Jonny had agreed as they followed Álvaro out. “As long as the safety protocols are better than they are on Star Trek’s holodecks.” That got a general laugh and the billionaire assured them there was no possibility of accidentally creating a super AI.

“I’m good,” he’d said, “but not that good!”

The rest of the floor, he explained as he lead them back to the elevator, as well as the half-floor above, consisted of support machinery for the simulators and weapons of the training facility. “There’s also an observation and control room on Level 78.”

They gave only a cursory glance to Level 76, which consisted of more support and maintenance machinery for the entire HQ tier. Sealed at it’s heart was the upper level of the power core… while the building as a whole ran off the solar energy collected by its exterior shell, the ten floors being offered to the Vanguard were independently powered. “We’ll talk about that next,” Álvaro had promised when JJ asked about the nature of the system.

The 75th floor contained the secure and completely isolated quantum computer system with quantum-entangled storage, capable of containing all the known works of mankind, and more; the building security office and defensive equipment; and the environmental controls for the top ten floors (which were also entirely isolated from the rest of the building). The most interesting area, to both Kyle and Scion however, was the power core control room.

Another high-tech, high-security door led into the heavily armored control chamber. It was the only access to the core itself, a pillar of pulsing, brilliant blue-white energy behind a heavy crystal containment unit. “It’s a zero-point energy system,” Álvaro explained. “The technology has finally begun to trickle down from the government and the superheoric community, which have kept a lid on it since Tesla first harnessed it, near the end of his life. He’d feared Edison getting his hands on it, never mind the Nazis, both of which concerns were fair enough at the time. But frankly, once the villains started using it in the 90s, what was the point in trying to squash it?

“This is, in fact, the first commercially approved zero-point energy reactor in the US, and while the solar panels power the rest of the building, this can power your headquarters at any conceivable level required – not as big as the one powering the Overwatch, of course, but then that would be over-kill! It even provides the energy for the XJV-7, by energizing replaceable, portable Apergy power cores.”

“Ah, so that’s what you wanted with the smaller cells,” JJ had said, sudden understanding dawning. “We’d wondered about that…”

The others had had to drag both Kyle and JJ away by main strength, and succeeded only after Álvaro had promised to send them the non-classified specs first thing in the morning. He also mentioned that they’d have access to all the specs should they take him up on his offer… the man certainly knew how to set his lure, Kyle had thought wryly.

The next floor down, Level 74 consisted of several laboratory spaces, in a variety of sizes and layouts. The walls here were a pale green, and the high-tech flooring a darker green. They were mostly empty, and the floor seemed only half finished. “If you move in here, we can equip these labs however you’d like,” Álvaro said as they poked their heads into the various spaces. “Any equipment you want I’m prepared to provide… physics, chemistry, engineering, you name it! And everything can be tied into the secure computer array upstairs.”

The 73rd floor was less tech and far more human, with plush blue carpet, eggshell white walls, and soft, indirect lighting. It proved to contain the living quarters for the team – more than enough private bedrooms (with en suite bathrooms) for the entire team, plus guests; a formal dining room and professional kitchen; and an impressive recreation room and a beautiful HD screening room that seated 20.

“I don’t imagine all of you will wish to take up residence here,” Álvaro had said as they returned to the elevator, “though any who do are certainly welcome. But regardless, you’ll each have your own private space to retreat to when you’re on duty.”

The 72nd floor of the headquarters section was the only one that would be open to the public – albeit a very limited section of the public: the press, support personnel and official visitors. A small but very well equipped state-of-the-art medical facility had impressed, as had the large corner space designated as their official meeting room… the views of the city, and of Mt. Defiance to the north and the Pacific to the west, promised to be spectacular in the daylight.

A reception area and large press room took up much of the central section of the floor, with a communications center, conference rooms and offices filling the rest of the space. “You’ll have your pick of the larger ones for you own individual offices, of course,” Álvaro had explained. “I’d sort of envisioned the one between the press room and meeting chamber as being for the team leader – it’s the only one with a secretary’s office attached – but of course that will be entirely up to you to decide.”

“Wait a minute,” the Blue Flame had said, raising his hand. He’d reverted to his human form after the Holodeck experience. “Excuse me, what do you mean ‘our offices?’ We’re superheroes, not… not…”

“Office drones!” Phantom Ace had supplied, looking a little worried himself.

Superheroes you may be,” Álvaro had laughed, “but I guarantee you that running a super-team is not that much different from running a business… and never forget that the government is always involved, at some level — which means paperwork!”

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

PHANTOM ACE
Gideon rolled over and blinked blearily at the gray light coming in the window. So much for the nice weather… it looked like it was back to the standard issue for this time of year – gray, wet and windy. He had taken up Jonny’s offer to let him crash at his place after the tour of the AzTech Pyramid last night, which had been more appealing than his flop house in the Undercity. He’d probably keep that dive as a backup, but if they decided to take de la Vega up on his offer he planned to move into the skyscraper. He still didn’t entirely trust the billionaire, but he was perfectly happy to enjoy his money while keeping an eye on him…

He had to admit, he was also still a little uncertain about this whole team thing. It would be nice to have friends, strong friends, protecting his back, but would that make up for being so publicly visible? De la Vega had talked about press conferences, photo shoots, publicity consultants… of course it was likely that the discretion ship had already sailed, given all the pictures and videos taken of him in action on the day of the Incident. No doubt his mysterious pursuers knew more or less where to find him now. His options were to run and go underground again in a new city, or maybe a new country this time… or to stay and make his stand.

He was tired of running.

And strangely, once the shock had worn off, the idea of having his own office sort of appealed to him. He’d never held any kind of a real job, and the image of himself behind a big desk, with a staff and everything, was oddly alluring. He really hadn’t known that a team required so many support people – he’d envisioned it sort of like the comics, he guessed. They’d gather in their headquarters, waiting for the authorities to call when trouble arose, with maybe a butler to take care of feeding them and seeing to… everything else that needed seeing to?

But he supposed in this day and age you really did need publicists, image consultants, secretaries, regular security dudes, and, of course, lawyers, to run the day-to-day stuff. They’d never have time to fight crime or alien invasions or deadly mutants or evil masterminds if they had to do all that themselves… not to mention doing their own laundry. And de la Vega had made it clear that they would be hiring the staff themselves, although SHADE would be vetting them, which all sounded pretty secure.

With a sigh he sat up on the sofa and stretched. Not the most comfortable one he’d ever slept on, but far from the worst! Wrapping the blanket around himself he headed for the bathroom… he could hear Jonny snoring in the bedroom, so he should take advantage of the facilities while he could. The APD had asked for his help over in Westport, where they were still looking for survivors in the wreckage of some collapsed building hit by a freak piece of wreckage, and he’d promised to be there by… he squinted at the clock… shit, in 12 minutes!

Thank dog he was a teleporter… he could just squeeze in a shower and still make it across town on time…

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

TOTEM
Cooper awoke to the smell of coffee and bacon, and the sound of Meg humming in the kitchen. Gray late morning light and the sound of rain was pleasantly lulling… for just a moment his sleep-fogged mind basked in the comfortable familiarity of the scene… they always alternated making breakfast for each other, and hers were always the best…

And then he woke up fully.

He leaped out of bed with a strangled curse, tangled his feet in the bedclothes, and hit the floor with a thump that rattled the pictures on the wall.

“Everything OK in there?” Meg called out, amusement clear in her voice. “You’re not fighting a super villain in my bedroom are you?”

Cooper groaned, and quickly untangled himself, wrapping the sheet around his naked torso. “No, no, nothing to worry about… just being clumsy.” She laughed and assured him breakfast would be ready soon, but there was time for a quick shower if he wanted one. He snatched the chance to put off a face-to-face for a little while longer, and slipped into the bathroom.

In the shower he leaned his head against the wall and let the hot water pour over his body. What in the name of all the Avatars had he done? Yesterday had been very full, and full of surprises. The research into the mysterious Astoria Incident had been intriguing, and the two fights instructive… he had already begun to formulate ways he and his new teammates could amplify their powers by working together. Certainly Álvaro de la Vega’s offer, and the tour of his AzTech Pyramid, had been a surprise… but not as big a surprise as finding Meg Halcyon waiting for them in Defiant Plaza when the tour was over.

He had excused himself from the group rather hastily, absently agreeing to meet the next afternoon at Apergy to decide on their response to de la Vega’s offer of sponsorship. He sensed their curiosity, but no one said anything, and he was grateful not to have this conversation in front of everyone… especially since he’d already taken some good-natured ribbing about his Raven-avatar flirting so outrageously with Sabra earlier!

“Hello Coo- er, Totem,” Meg had said, pleasantly enough. She allowed herself to be lead away from the rest of the Vanguard without demure. “Quite the debut you had yesterday.”

“Um… yes, I suppose it was. And thank you for all those questions yesterday at the press conference. Not really my debut, of course… I’ve been quietly using my… gifts… where they were needed since I returned last fall…” he stopped then in embarrassment. He also hadn’t gotten in touch with his old lover on his return to the city. Indeed, had actively tried to avoid her.

Meg shrugged off the awkward moment and gave him a wry smile. “Yes, I’ve suspected that was the case for the last several months – reports of mysterious help from odd metas that sounded very much like your Avatars came to my attention more than once. The only one I was sure of, though, was that incident off the mouth of the Columbia back in January – I recognized Orca from Captain Astor’s description in his after-action report of the rescue of the survivors from the capsized ship. Hurrah for the Freedom of Information Act, huh?”

“Listen, Meg,” Cooper blurted out. “I’m sorry that I didn’t contact you, when I returned to Astoria. I – It’s just that –” he tapered off, not knowing how to explain the full scope of the disaster in which his attempt to return home had ended.

Meg had laid a hand on his shoulder then, the first time she’d actually touched him. “Cooper, relax. I understand why you did what you did – I was angry at the time, but I’ve come to realize that you really had no choice. I can’t say I’m thrilled about it, but I’m not angry any more.” They had wandered across Defiance Plaza and were now standing in front of St. Catherine’s Cathedral.

“But I am curious,” she had added, stopping and turning to face him. “Why are you back at all? I thought you would be on your mystical Island, training a new generation of shamen, and if I ever saw you again at all it would be as an old lady, many years from now.”

“It’s… a long story,” Cooper had sighed, putting his hand over hers. “And a sad one. Are you sure you want to hear this now?”

“Of course I do, you goof!” she’d snorted. “I’m a reporter… even if I’m not going to be able to print it (I assume), I still want to know everything. Always! But the clouds are starting to roll in, and it’s getting cold. You might not feel it much, but this mere mortals sure does… why don’t we go back to my place and get comfortable, if it’s such a long story? Have you eaten dinner yet?”

He admitted that he hadn’t eaten since breakfast, and she proposed they get some Thai take-out from the place down the block from her apartment, then settle in and he could tell her all about it. For Cooper it was like all the horrible months since last July had just dropped away and, just like old times, he was utterly unable to say no to her.

As she tucked her arm in his and they turned to head for the ART light rail stop at Columbia Blvd and Broadway, he leaned his head down and said quietly in her ear, “I’ve missed you, Meg.”

And now here he was, waking up in her apartment after a night of passion that had taken him, at least, completely by surprise. As if his decisions had never come between them, as if he hadn’t broken both their hearts. But was this just a one-time thing? Did she want to pick up where they’d left off? Did he? And even if they both did, was it wise? If he was really going to take on the role of a superhero now –

“OK, stop wasting my hot water,” Meg yelled, rapping on the bathroom door. “Breakfast is on the table, so get your ass out here, mister!”

Well, Cooper thought as he turned off the water and reached for a towel, the only way to see where this was going was through breakfast, it seemed…

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

BLUE FLAME
Jonny melted his alarm clock to slag before realizing that it was, in fact, his cell phone’s insistent bleating that had drawn him up from a deep sleep. His chagrin at having destroyed a perfectly good clock/radio was quickly overwhelmed by the realization that he’d done it by turning only his hand into blue plasma! He hadn’t realized before this moment that his transformation didn’t need to be all-or-nothing…  he examined the flaming appendage closely, trying to see where exactly the line between flesh and flame was, and struggling to figure out how this was possible…

It wasn’t until the phone stopped ringing that he realized he hadn’t answered it, lost in this new manifestation of his powers. He picked up the AzTech Warrior smart phone and checked his missed calls list – Scion! Shit, second day as a superhero and he was already missing calls from the boss! He quickly hit the call-back button… Scion answered on the second ring.

“Sorry, sorry,” Jonny said before his teammate could say anything more than ‘hello.’ “I was asleep, and then I slagged my clock/radio, and I – well, never mind. What’s up?”

“No problem, Jonny,” JJ said, amusement in his voice. “But I could use your help this morning. I just got a call from a young woman who claims a friend of hers is trapped beneath a collapsed building. She’s convinced he’s still alive – it’s an ice cream shop, and she says the freezer is built like a fallout shelter – but the authorities aren’t letting anyone dig due to the danger of further collapse.

“I promised I’d head over and lend a hand, but I’m not necessarily the best one for the job, not if the remaining structure is so fragile. Phantom Ace is helping on the west side this morning, Artemis is in some mysterious meeting, and I was hoping your non-material form and ability to incinerate things might prove useful. You game?”

“Sure!” Jonny was up and rummaging for clean clothes in an instant. “Just tell me where to go and I’ll meet you ASAP, chief!”

“It’s the Salt & Straw in the 200 block of Eastline Street, near Otter Point Amusement Park. And don’t call me chief!”

It wasn’t until he was fully dressed and headed for the door that Jonny realized he was an idiot. As soon as he changed to his plasma form he’d destroy whatever he was wearing… d’oh! Mr. de la Vega had promised last night that he’d set them all up with the latest Q-lon costumes, assuming they agreed to let him sponsor the team, but until then he’d have to go into battle naked. Looking around to double check that Roland had left already, he skinned out of his clothes and prepared to “flame on.”

“Damn!” How would he get out of his apartment without the risk of burning it down? And how could he be sure no one would see him leave? He hadn’t fully decided on the whole secret identity thing yet, but he wanted to keep his options open… having the Blue Flame be seen leaving Jonny Osaka’s apartment would pretty much be a dead give away, wouldn’t it?

In the end he’d thrown on his rattiest old sweat pants and a faded Meta-Metal Death 2010 World Tour t-shirt, and headed out bare-footed. Ducking into an alley two blocks away, after making sure no one was watching, he triggered the change. His clothes vanished, reduced to their component molecules, and he rose up between the buildings into the gray sky. Rain sizzled as it hit his aura, and he turned north, pouring on the speed…

[Click here for more on Scion’s & Blue Flame’s mission of mercy]

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

DR. FROTH
Ted arrived at Apergy Systems International for the team meeting more than an hour early. He wanted to go over the latest simulations he’d been running on the possible effects of the matrix crystal “parasites” should they be released into the human population on a larger scale. JJ Astor certainly had a sweet set-up here, and while Ted appreciated the man’s willingness to let others play in his sandbox, he had to admit that Álvaro de la Vega’s offer of unlimited lab and tech resources was a major temptation… nonetheless…

It wasn’t long before the others began to arrive, and JJ’s assistant, the unflappable and hyper-competent Penny Monet, had arranged for Triceratops Delicatessen to cater a very nice spread. If the Vanguard was going to eat like this all the time it was certainly another temptation, he thought as he piled his  plate high. This pulled pork was to die for… nonetheless…

At 17:00 sharp JJ, in his Scion armor but sans helmet, called the group to order, and started the ball rolling by listing his own feelings, both pro and con, about accepting Álvaro de la Vega’s offer of, essentially, corporate sponsorship. Soon everyone was offering up their opinions, impressions and intuitions. Good arguments were made on both sides, but the arc definitely trended toward idea of accepting the proposal. Artemis spoke of her meeting earlier in the day with Director Adams, the head of SHADE, in Washington, D.C., and assured the group that the agency would be solidly behind them once everyone passed the usual background checks. That latter item was definitely not a temptation, Ted thought… he had no desire at all to have the government knowing his business…

It eventually came down to the vote, with JJ going first. “I can’t say I don’t have some reservations about Álvaro de la Vega, but on the whole I think his offer is sincere. Assuming we can guarantee our autonomy from his direct interference, I vote we accept his offer. God knows I can’t match his resources to fund a team!”

“I also have certain reservations about Mr. de la Vega,” Artemis spoke next. “But they do not extend to his offer of sponsorship for this team. I think whatever secrets he may be keeping, benign or otherwise, might best be uncovered by keeping him close… as the saying goes, ‘keep your friends close, and your enemies closer.’ I do not believe Mr. de la Vega is our enemy, but nevertheless, closer seems wiser.”

“I sense no evil in the man,” Totem said. “Although Raven does sense a kindred spirit of… mischief… in him, perhaps. I vote we accept his offer.”

“Going back to what JJ mentioned,” Quanta said when his turn came, “even if we pooled our resources, and I certainly have some of my own, we could never match what de la Vega brings to the table. I like to think I’m a good judge of character, and honestly – I feel good about this deal. I say we go for it.”

“I think Álvaro de la Vega is an amazing guy!” Jonny said enthusiastically. “I really don’t see why you guys think he’s hiding something, he seems pretty up-front to me. I say hell yes, we take the offer!”

Roland shrugged and polished off his Coke. “I didn’t trust him much yesterday, not at first, and I’m not 100% sure now. But I have to admit he was pretty cool under pressure… and he really did seem to be a lot more concerned about his workers than about his stuff, or even himself. And Artemis is right – if there is something hinky about him, better we’re around when it pops up. So I say yeah, let’s do it.”

Everybody turned to look at Ted, who straightened up from the slouch he’d slipped into. He coughed once, cleared his throat, then spoke. His tone was serious. “I think it’s a good deal, and the arguments for are a lot stronger than those against. So I’d vote to accept the offer. Except…” he took a deep breath. “I’m not going to be a member of the team after today, so I don’t really think my vote should count.”

The room erupted into surprised exclamations for a moment – even Artemis seemed to have been caught off-guard by his announcement. Eventually it quieted down, and Quanta put a hand on his shoulder.  “Why?” was all he said.

“I’ve been going over what to do with my powers ever since I got them,” Ted sighed. “I’d still be dithering if it wasn’t for the disaster the other day. I felt like the only responsible thing to do was “take the cape,” as they say. But after two days and three major fights I realized this just isn’t what I want to do. And it sure as hell is not the best use of my brain!

“I’ve been working on important environmental issues for years, and I just think that’s where I can do the most good – the world will be a lot better off if I find some solutions to global warming rather than spend my time punching out a few more super-crooks.

“That’s not to say I’ll never put on my super-suit again (especially if de la Vega will still spring for one of those Q-lon babies!), but only in a real crisis. Or if I’m the only one on the scene, or whatever. So consider me a reservist, I guess… maybe a consultant? But I can’t do this full-time.”

For a few minutes several of the others tried to convince him to stay, but he was adamant and in the end they had to accept his decision. It was with some real sadness that the group said their farewells, and Dr. Froth left the building.

“Well damn,” Phantom Ace said once Ted was gone. “Seven is, like, the traditional number for a super-team. Guess we’ll just have to settle for six now.”

“No,” Scion said, looking thoughtful. “There is another…”

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

The next three weeks were the proverbial whirlwind of activity. The Vanguard met with local and state authorities, politicianscitizen groups… and, of course, the press. Interviews, press conferences, and photo shoot after photo shoot eventually left some of the group wondering if Dr. Froth hadn’t had the right idea after all. The one exception was their newest member, the man of living ice, Chilz.

His appearance on the scene might not have been as dramatic as the others during the Incident itself, but the press were eating up his “origin story” – blasted by a bolt from the Incident, trapped in wreckage, loyal friends fighting the powers-that-be to rescue him, the heroes who stepped in to help, the dramatic emergence from his “tomb,” and best of all, his visually stunning save of not only several civilians, but arguably Scion himself. Since much of the events, especially the save, had been captured on video, the story had proven to have legs.

With no desire to hide his identity (unlike most of his teammates), and a seemingly infinite patience with, and fondness for, the press (unlike Scion), Chilz quickly became a media darling. Once the team announced that he would be joining them, replacing the mysteriously vanished Dr. Froth, he became the most visible member of the team, after Scion, in the coming weeks.

De la Vega and his team organized most of the meetings with the authorities, and all the press events, but the billionaire always stood aside when it was the Vanguard’s time to shine. Álvaro really didn’t seem to be in it for his own publicity, publicly minimizing his part in sponsoring the team; and privately he only offered advice or input when asked for it. All in all, his AzTech team of professionals proved to be a valuable resource, and gave the team a good template of what to look for in hiring their own HQ staff.

Scion, and to an extent Artemis, taught the others much about dealing with the authorities both in public and private. Thankfully almost everyone in town seemed eager to work with the new heroes, and excited at the prospect of having a team of superheroes to call on when threats like the Astoria Incident might rear their heads in the future. The occasional crimes that individual members stopped during this period, and the help given in minor crises such as fires and traffic accidents, only reinforced the public support for the new arrangement.

To show its support for the new home team, one of the citizen groups suggested the mayor present the Vanguard with the key to the city. It proved to be a popular suggestion once the press started trumpeting the idea, and at the end of their first full week as a team the heroes found themselves standing on a stage on the steps of City Hall receiving a large golden key from Mayor Syrett in a public ceremony. Afterward most of the heroes spent time talking to the press and signing glossy pictures of themselves for adoring fans – except Artemis, who vanished immediately after the ceremony, as she almost always did in such circumstances.

Drowned out by the ceremony, and the media circus surrounding it, was the news that the Regional Director of the local SHADE office had resigned “to spend more time with his family.” The fact that he was single was discreetly ignored. The new Regional Director was immediately named by Director Lorenzo Adams – former Astoria native and deputy director of the Los Angeles office Marilyn Mack. What didn’t make the papers, but was shared with the team by Artemis, was the fact that the Director gave his new chief one over-riding imperative, eclipsing her standard duties – clean house. Do it quickly. Do it quietly. But most importantly, do it thoroughly. And apparently she was doing just that…

Which made the announcement, about a week later, that it was time for the Vanguard to face their security clearance interviews with the agency easier to bear. For most, any way – both Phantom Ace and Quanta were still very wary about giving up their secrets to anyone.

In the latter case, Artemis had assured Kyle there was no point in resisting… she had discovered his identity with little effort (and no, she wasn’t telepathic) and SHADE could do the same, if they hadn’t already. Better to come clean and accept the fact that secret identities were almost impossible to conceal from the government these days… but much easier to conceal from the public-at-large with the government’s help.

The interviews took place over two days in a small, non-descript conference room in the SHADE offices in the Bob Packwood Federal Building. They were led by a two-person team, Agent Mark Jessup and Agent Gwendolyn Stark, both new transfers from the Midwest Region office. Artemis agreed to go first, to reassure her more nervous teammates. In a similar vein of solidarity, Scion would take the last slot, despite having already been vetted by SHADE years ago – if his team had to do it, so would he.

Artemis had another motive for going first… to start things off with a certain level of intimidation that might smooth things for the others. She smiled to herself as she teleported into a dark corner of the room, startling the two agents. She so seldom got to have just plain fun…

“Um, good morning, er, Artemis,” Agent Jessup greeted her, recovering very quickly from his surprise. “Please, be seated.” He gestured at the chair on the opposite side of the table from himself and his partner.

“Thank you Agent Jessup,” she said, staying just far enough out of the light over the table to keep most of her face in shadow, “I prefer to stand. Let us begin.”

The two agents exchanged looks, barely masking their annoyance, but with a hint of uncertainty. They clearly wondered how she knew their names – they hadn’t introduced themselves yet. After a moment of paper shuffling Agent Stark cleared her throat and asked the first question. “Can you please give us an overview of your powers, in so far as you’re familiar with them?”

“No,” Artemis said.

Another surprised exchange of looks. “Artemis, we have no desire to antagonize you, but you must understand that it is SHADE that must ultimately sign off on your team, if you expect to get any federal–”

“I am aware of the purpose of these interviews, Agent Stark, and the role of your organization. Please proceed.”

The younger woman’s jaw clenched slightly, but she decided not to push just yet. “How long have you been operating as a “hero?”

“Rather a long time.” She didn’t elaborate, but did add, “And I suppose it would depend on how you define “hero.”

A heavy sigh from Jessup. “What motivated you to start?”

“A thirst for justice – and vengeance.”

“Could you elaborate on that please?”

“No.”

“Look, if you’re not going to cooperate with this process, why did you bother–” Agent Jessup’s outburst was interrupted by the ringing of his cell phone. He frowned in annoyance as he pulled it out to check the caller ID… annoyance quickly turning to surprise. He hit the “accept call” button with alacrity.

Agent Jessup here… good morning sir… yes sir… no sir… sir, I think… no sir, she didn’t mention it… no sir… I see, sir… yes, thank you sir. Good-bye.”

Slipping his phone into his pocket, the agent shuffled through the papers in front of him, pulled out a pen to sign one, then handed pen and paper to his partner. “Just sign it,” he said. “I’ll explain later.” Stark reluctantly complied, and the pen and paper were shoved towards Artemis next.

“If you’ll sign here, ma’am, that will conclude our interview. Your security clearance should be ready by this afternoon.”

“Thank you Agent,” Artemis said, bending down to sign her nom d’hero below the other two signatures. When the the agents looked up after verifying the documentation was in order she was gone.

♦  ♦  ♦  ♦

Once the interviews were all over, the paperwork and non-disclosure agreements signed, and the security clearances granted, the group got down to the serious business of outfitting their new headquarters, with both hardware and personnel. Álvaro de la Vega had crews working around the clock, bringing in more contractors as needed to get the labs fully functional and the defensive systems installed.

With the mystery of the Astoria Incident currently at a seeming dead end, Scion and Quanta spent a great deal of their time overseeing the work at the Pyramid themselves, while Artemis took advantage of the already operational Training Room to begin the combat lessons Phantom Ace had requested of her. Jonny occasionally joined these sessions in his human form, a move of which she heartily approved – you could never tell when your powers might fail or be unavailable, and you should have innate skills to fall back on. Eventually almost everyone began to cycle through her combat classes…

Kyle was a little surprised when, reminding Artemis one day that she had promised to put him in touch with people who could fix him up with a solid fake ID and medical credentials, she had actually laughed.

Kyle,” she said. “You’ve already met the people best suited for such a task. SHADE is the best possible source for the kind of secondary persona you wish to create. I could direct you to less reputable sources, true, but the results could never be as solid as those SHADE would provide. And given your noble purpose in creating this new persona, I think you should have the best.”

He realized she was right, of course, and he called Regional Director Mack directly. A week later it was Agent Stark who personally hand delivered his new alternate identity: Dr. Jason Creswell, a research doctor specializing in childhood diseases and degenerative disorders, recently arrived in Astoria from Germany, with privileges at all the major local hospitals.

Two days after that, the day before the official opening of the AzTech Pyramid and the public unveiling of the Vanguard’s headquarters, the group met to discuss organization and take a leadership vote…

Meanwhile… Post-Incident Clean-up

As the seven heroes dug into the dirty work of search-and-rescue, general clean-up, and citizen reassurance in the aftermath of what the national press was already calling the Astoria Incident, they got to know one another a bit, as well as some of the other first responders who poured into the area as soon as the metahuman threats were neutralized. Cops, paramedics, firefighters and average citizens all rushed unhesitatingly to perform the urgent tasks of saving those who could still be saved, and respectfully caring for the remains of those who could not.

Most of the beat cops who swarmed in once the battle was over and the streets cleared seemed genuinely grateful for the superhuman help, if maybe unsure of exactly how to act around the new heroes. The best of the lot seemed to be patrolman Carl Lebowski and his rookie partner Everett Manson, the only uniforms on the ground during the actual disaster. They’d been the ones Artemis and Dr. Froth had turned the disgusting rubber-man over to after they’d pulled his unconscious but otherwise unharmed ass out the building he’d crashed through. The cops had secured the unconscious prisoner and then pitched in to help the heroes deal with the still-panicked citizenry.

Most of the APD detectives, on the other hand, seemed more peeved than anything else at this sudden invasion of costumed vigilantes in their once-quiet backyard. They helped the heroes where they had to, especially in the face of the obvious goodwill of the citizens, but it was generally grudging and half-hearted. The main exception was Detective Eleanor Ransom – fortyish, half-Black / half-Latina, with a penchant for large, colorful necklaces’ to offset her all-business charcoal skirt and jacket, she looked like she’d just walked out of a police procedural TV show. She seemed genuinely pleased with the sudden advent of heroes in the city, however, and made an effort to establish some rapport with them as the day wore on. She also encouraged her peers to do likewise, sometimes quite acerbically.

It was the arrival, however belatedly, of the FBI that had actually helped to foster a more favorable view of the new heroes in the eyes of the local detectives. With the Feds doing their usual we’ll-let-you-know-if-we-need-you act, it became a game between the ACD and the heroes to keep them running in circles as much as possible. When SHADE arrived, of course, they out-Feded the Feds, but at least they didn’t treat the cops like amateurs nor the supers like dangerous, idiot children. It quickly became clear to the heroes that they were simply unknown quantities to the SHADE agents, and just needed to prove themselves worthy of trust… which was fair enough.

As the day went on Det. Ransom had been happy to share whatever information the APD had, with the understanding that the heroes would share whatever they might learn in return. She had also asked how she could contact them if she needed to. At the reluctance this produced in some of the new heroes she had smiled and suggested that maybe they’d be more comfortable sharing that information with Captain Astor, since he was already a publicly known hero with no secret identity to protect. Scion agreed to act as liaison, and they’d moved on to discussing the various other hot spots around the city that had suffered from the Event.

Nowhere had been hit as hard as the Silver Mile, of course, being at the epicenter. But hundreds of the the strange light beams had affected people throughout the city (several incidents were also reported across the river in Long Beach and Knappton), leaving death and new metahumans in their wake. Stormfront had flown in from Portland to help, and had focused on the outlying areas once he saw that Scion and his team of new heroes were dealing with the main problems. He’d be heading back to the City of Roses soon, having rounded up six relatively harmless new metahuman criminals/crazies and identified and interviewed a dozen potential new breakouts.

By the time the sun was sinking towards the Pacific things were enough under control that the seven could relax for a moment and discuss what had happened. With the police, FBI, SHADE and FEMA busy arguing over jurisdiction, and mostly trying to ignore the costumed vigilantes amongst them, it was comparatively easy to find some privacy. Given the eyewitness accounts, including those of the Blue Flame and Phantom Ace, there was little doubt how the mysterious sphere had been delivered. Scion, Quanta and Dr. Froth had jointly undertaken a close forensic inspection of the charred pieces of the plane as they were recovered… and the rather unnerving Artemis had performed her own investigation.

It was clear the corporate jet, belonging to a local company called ZeroPoint, had been carrying the object, but there was as yet no way to determine if the explosion and resultant attack had been accidental or intended. No manifest survived the blast, nor had the pilot, and local airports had no record of the flight, so questions of any passengers and the nature of the the cargo remained unanswered. Quanta used his ability to backtrack the paths of every atom in his range of perception, what he had taken to calling his post-cognition sense, to “see” the actual explosion… but all he could confirm was that something inside the plane had exploded and that it didn’t appear to have been a conventional explosive device. He also definitely ruled out an external attack on the plane.

The only significant anomaly the group could find was a very strange energy signature in the area around the attack. It was strongest in a half-mile radius around ground zero, and could be detected on every person struck by a beam whom they could test. Phantom Ace, by spot teleporting randomly around the city with a special detector Scion and Quanta had whipped up, was able to establish the energy’s rate of fall-off – at about 11.4 miles out from the epicenter, the signature became undetectable..

Once they’d determined there was no more physical evidence to be found, and with the FBI and SHADE forensic teams moving in, the heroes retreated to a surviving Starbucks a few blocks from the Mile. As they sipped various hot beverages provided by the two stalwart baristas who remained on duty, despite cracked windows and occasional power fluctuations, they pondered what the mysterious energy signature they’d found might mean.

They weren’t really doing much more than guessing, however, and Scion had just proposed they all remove to his nearby lab, where his high-tech equipment could let them do a proper analysis, when Det. Ransom approached them. A short, stout, but quite dignified Asian-American man in a police uniform accompanied her. They all stood up and turned to face the pair.

“This is Chief of Police Oscar Edwards,” Ransom began without preamble. “He wanted to talk to you all, and I said I’d make the introductions. Now don’t embarrass me!” Who that last comment had been addressed to, themselves or the chief, was unclear as she walked off to yell at one of the uniforms who wasn’t wearing latex gloves as he gathered evidence.

“The first thing I want to do,” Chief Edwards said, “is thank you, each and every one of you, for the tremendous help you provided our city today. The death toll is tragic, but without you it would have been much worse, and we’d be facing at least four super-powered threats that my men and women are currently ill-equipped to handle.

“I know some on the force might be dubious about super humans in Astoria… with the exception of Captain Astor,” he acknowledged Scion with a nod, the two having met several times before, “we’ve gone rather a long time without them, mostly, unlike most other big cities. But I don’t share that doubt, not a for a minute.

“I was inspired to become a cop by the example Ultra set when I was young – that man inspired a lot of people, actually, in a lot of ways. I think we’ve forgotten that, in the years since his passing, and that’s unfortunate. But this disaster may be a chance to show that the spark can be reignited for a new generation. I think you folks may be just what this city needs right now. Welcome to Astoria!”

With that he offered his hand to Scion, an approving smile on his face, and then shook hands with each of the others in turn, hesitating only when he came to the Blue Flame. The incandescent hero shrugged and offered a little wave instead. Chief Edwards smiled wryly, waved back and then addressed the group again, growing more serious.

“I have one further favor to ask of you all. I’ve called for a press conference at 18:00, a little less than two hours from now, and I would consider it a personal favor if you could all attend it with me – let the people see you, answer a few questions, and generally help us calm things down. I know it would give the people of Astoria some reassurance to get a sense that there are real people under those masks, to see you as more than just a collection of superpowers. It will be good for everyone in the city to see us all working together. Can I count on you?”

Scion didn’t hesitate – he might not be particularly fond of the press, but he had enough experience handling them to be comfortable with the job – and if he was really going to bite the bullet and jump into this hero thing, handling the press was certainly part of the job. Totem was fine with the prospect, good press being just what he wanted at this point, and of course Jonny was thrilled at the prospect of his first press conference – and since he’d figured out how to thicken the flames around his nether regions he wouldn’t be flashing the world anymore!

Some of the others, however, hesitated. Artemis had spent decades remaining in the shadows, purposefully avoiding the limelight – but todays events had clearly changed everything in her city, and she sensed that it was time to step out of the shadows once again… she too agreed. But Ted, Kyle and Gideon all had their own reasons to be leery of meeting the press, some concerns more serious than others…

Ted was simply unsure of how well his disguise would hold up, and was definitely not ready to go public just yet; Kyle also remained unsure if his nano-shell disguised him well enough, and had a much more long-standing dread of the media connecting him with his meta human abilities; Gideon, on the other hand, had a mysterious, murderous organization still hunting him, as well as whatever remnants of the old cartel might still be around, and he’d probably already had too much exposure today…

All three were vague and non-committal, which Chielf Edwards took with good grace. As he left to prepare his own remarks for the media he simply said that he hoped they’d see each other soon. Once the city’s top cop had departed, Scion again suggested the group head to his lab to see if they could come up with any answers before the press conference, and everyone agreed.

At Apergy Systems International the staff had long ago left, either to help with the recovery efforts or to check on the safety of family and friends, pick up children from schools freshly off lock-down, or just gather in bars to talk about the day’s stunning events. Penny, of course, had remained to work the phones, and JJ had to smile beneath his helmet at how well she hid her reaction at seeing six more costumed and/or masked people follow him in the front doors – only a slight widening of the eyes betrayed her surprise.

“Will you be wanting the large conference room then, sir?” she enquired cooly, not missing a beat. JJ decided then and there that he wasn’t paying his executive assistant nearly enough, and resolved to correct that as soon as possible.

“No, Ms. Monet, but we will be needing the main lab,” he replied, equally matter-of-factly, allowing his helmet to melt back into his armor. “And I’m afraid we’re all starving… we discussed it on the way over, and if Flying Pie is open and able to deliver, could you order up five pies, various toppings, including one vegetarian? Offer whatever it takes to get them here in 30 minutes.”

“Of course sir, no problem. Will your guests be needing security badges?”

“Mmmm, I suppose so… bring them up to the lab later, for now I’ll be escorting everyone. Thank you.”

By the time the pizzas had arrived and been consumed, the energy signature had given up at least some of its secrets to the heroes, via the power of deep scanning technology and an electron microscope. Gesturing at the image projected on the largest of the labs monitors, Scion settled back in his chair with a grunt.

“That, ladies and gentlemen, is a shard of kundalini crystal.”

A little less than 5 mm long and 2 mm wide, as seen through a standard microscope, the mineral appeared a normal crystal, of translucent emerald green. Magnified to atomic resolution, however, it’s lattice structure revealed an eye-aching, impossible geometry, as if part of it turned a corner and simply went… elsewhere. It gave Gideon a headache to look at for long, and by the expressions on some of the others’ faces he wasn’t the only one.

Given the size of the “disco ball” that had apparently launched the shard, millions of other, similar shards must’ve been spread over the city, or at least the area covered by the Incident. It also proved that it had been an artificial, created event – although whether purposeful or accidental it was impossible to say at this point.

“Also known as a matrix crystal,” Quanta added, tossing back the last of his Coke and flipping the can into the recycle can across the room, “which has been the preferred scientific nomenclature since Professor Sampson irrefutably proved their strange properties around the turn of the current century. There are many sub-types, each a different color and exhibiting a variety of odd effects, under the right circumstances. But they all share this unsettling “hyper-spatial” structural geometry, as Sampson calls it.”

“They’ve been known to humanity for many thousands of years, of course, under a variety of names,” JJ went on. “Kundalini has become the most common name in recent years, but they’ve had many names, in many places around the world. In ancient China they called them Nüwa gems, while the ancient Romans named them Manalis stones; the Slavs refer to Altyr stones, from the “navel of the World,” which is interesting because the ancient Greek name was Omphalos stones, which also means “navel of the World.” The Hindus have several names for them, aside from Kundalini, the one that Westerners latched onto – the nine royal Navaratna gems, and Cintamani wishing gems being maybe the next most common.

“I’m familiar with them because they make up an important part of Atlantean technology, despite being incredibly rare, especially under the sea. In fact, it is powdered Vedu crystals, as they call them, which is fused with a secret alloy of metals to create orichalcum, the substance which forms the base of my armor.”

“And whatever they’re called, they always are associate with strange powers or abilities” Artemis took up the thread, somewhat to everyones’s surprise. She’d been unnervingly quite until then, but now she pulled back her hood, revealing a cascade of raven hair. She left the domino mask on, however. “For most of human history, stones like these have been mistaken for either common quartz or the relatively mundane gemstones they closely resemble – rubys, sapphires, emeralds, and so on. But there have always been people who knew how to utilize the powers inherent in the crystals… which can be extremely dangerous in the wrong hands.”

“As I think we’ve seen today,” Ted sighed. He’d finally taken his mask off, though he still wore the goggles and hadn’t yet revealed his real name to the others. “But, if you don’t mind my asking, how do you know so much about them?”

Artemis shrugged and sat back in her chair. “I spent… a number of years in a place where such knowledge is common currency. I had little to do with the crystals personally, but it was impossible not to study there without learning something of them. The thing I think we should keep in mind is that the crystals tend to take on… characteristics, let’s say… of the environment or energies to which they are exposed for any length of time. It is why they have always been sought after by mystics and magic-wielders of every kind.”

“Magic!” Quanta snorted a laugh. “Please, there’s no such thing. Whatever anyone calls “magic” is just science they don’t understand, as I think Professor Sampson has proved with the matrix crystals. Yes, they can be used to create strange, even seemingly impossible effects, and can channel many odd energies, not all of which we fully understand, but every year brings new understanding and gets us one step closer to putting all the pieces together in a rational way.”

“Well, that’s one way to look at things,” Artemis agreed, with an unnerving little half-smile. “I seem to recall that it wasn’t that long ago, however, that psionics, not to mention super powers, were considered the stuff of fantasy. Yet here we are, both are fully accepted, even if not fully understood.”

“Which just proves my point,” Quanta said. “We’ve moved from—”

“Listen, this is really interesting and all,” Jonny interrupted. “But isn’t it sort of beside the point? I mean, where did this crystal come from, and what does it have to do with what happened today?”

“Ah, yes, well we were getting to that,” JJ assured him. “While Phantom Ace was popping around town taking sensor readings for us, Quanta and I convinced Detective Ransom to let us examine that unfortunate looking rubberized fellow Artemis, Blue Flame and Dr. Froth took down. He was still unconscious and unable to give consent, of course; but by the same token, he couldn’t really object, either.

“I scanned him, and as we suspected the energy signature on him was much stronger than the ambient energy in the area of the Incident. But even better, we were able to localize the source of the energy to a specific location on his body – at the top of his spine, just below the base of his skull. I’d promised Ransom no invasive procedures, but this was too important to pass up. It was really a very small incision… and it was worth it, because we recovered that,” he gestured to the screen where the image of the matrix crystal continued to slowly revolve.

“Actually, it was good thing we removed it,” Quanta added. “There was no sign of a break in Armstrong’s skin – I’m not sure if that was due to some effect of the crystal or his own meta healing properties – but it was clear the shard was burrowing towards his spine. I think the rubberized nature of his transformed flesh was slowing it down, but it would have made it eventually. Then there’d have been no removing it, if it fused to his nervous system, not without killing or crippling him.”

Dr. Froth didn’t look like he’d be particularly upset by either outcome, but he didn’t voice the thought. “So another few hours and there would’ve been nothing left we could analyze or study?” he asked instead.

“Yes, we very much lucked out there,” JJ agreed. “My readings indicate that the energy is dissipating from the environment at a rate such that it will be undetectable by tomorrow morning. We could probably get readings off victims indefinitely, but we wouldn’t be able to recover any crystals if they were fused onto nervous systems.”

“But do we know that’s what would happen,” Blue Flame asked anxiously. “I mean, maybe that stretchy guy was a fluke or something. Maybe he already had the crystal inside him…”

“A good observation, kid,” Quanta said. “But no, we checked half a dozen others that the police had in custody. They all had elevated energy readings, and on each person we found a crystal fused to their spine at the base of the skull. There was no way to remove those crystals by then, unfortunately.”

“But you can relax, Blue Flame,” JJ interjected quickly. He could see the kid was getting distraught, and he could guess why. Unlike the rest of them, who all seemed to have had their powers for awhile, he’d only gained his this morning, a victim himself of the Incident. “I scanned you once we all got here to my lab, and I detected almost none of the tell-tale energy signature on you, and absolutely no trace of a crystal.”

“We think you, even more than that poor sod Armstrong, lucked out in the power set you were dealt,” Quanta said. “His thick, rubbery skin and flesh slowed down the movement of the crystal, and you turning into living plasma – well, you just vaporized any crystal that might’ve initially latched on to you.”

Blue Flame was visibly relieved at this news, but Artemis frowned as she considered the ramifications.

“If we are assuming that the beams were used to “inject” the crystals into their victims,” she said after a moment, ” and that the crystals caused the powers… I would expect that once the source was removed, the powers would vanish as well. Yet both Armstrong and the Blue Flame have retained their altered forms and associated powers even after the crystals were removed.”

“I don’t think the matrix crystals are actually the source of any of the powers,” Froth shook his head in disagreement. “I suspect that each crystal merely acted as a catalyst to trigger the complex of genes and so-called “junk” DNA that we know governs the meta-human transformation.

“There’s still so much we don’t know about the whole process, but one thing that’s certain is that once the meta-complex is activated, there’s no going back – whatever powers or physical transformation occurs, they’re there for good.”

“But then that raises the obvious question,” Totem observed. “Why go to all the trouble of having the rakir crystal, as my people call them, burrow in and permanently attach itself to the host, if it has already performed its function? It would require effort to achieve this, yes? It’s unlikely to be a simple accident?”

“Well, maybe if the crystals had been developed for some other purpose,” Froth said slowly, considering. “For medical treatment, for example. And when the plane exploded, the technology was damaged… maybe?”

“Does ZeroPoint work with matrix crystals?” Artemis asked. “Could this have simply been an… industrial accident?”

“I don’t think so, but…” JJ hesitated. “They’re a minor competitor of mine in the clean energy / energy storage business, and I’ve never heard of them having any expertise, or interest, in bio-tech. It just doesn’t fit with what they do, really… although matrix crystals as an energy source might have caught their attention?”

At that point a musical note winkled on his wrist comp, and he sighed. “Well, as compelling as this mystery is, it’s time to get back to the Mile for the Chief’s press conference, for those of us who are going. Descion time, Froth, Quanta, Ace… are you coming, or not?”

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

It was a beautiful sunset over Astoria as Artemis teleported herself and Totem into the shadows on a rooftop overlooking the site of the press conference. Although she doubted anyone in the crowd below could appreciate the beauty with the glare of all the TV lights illuminating the street. The two heroes silently enjoyed the the vivid colors above the warm lights of the city’s towers to the west for a moment, until Scion and Blue Flame swooped down toward them.

They had decided to make an entrance, and Scion grasped wrists with Totem, lifting him up and then dropping them both down toward the makeshift platform that had been erected at the north end of the pedestrian overpass at Pacific Avenue. Blue Flame dropped down to their right and Artemis glided down to the left, seeming a shadow come to life. They touched down almost simultaneously just behind Chief Edwards, who turned and smiled at them. He said nothing about the missing heroes, as the murmuring of the crowd of reporters, first responders and regular citizens rose to a roar.

After the crowd quieted the Chief gave a brief précis of what was known at that hour… 123 people dead, 87 still missing or unaccounted for, and at least $100 million in damages by early estimations. The plane that had exploded had belonged to local energy company ZeroPoint, who were cooperating fully with the authorities but had no explanation as to what had happened. According to company records the plane was scheduled for a standard executive pick-up in Seattle, and nothing normally aboard it could explain the phenomena witnessed today. The FBI, SHADE and local experts were at this hour still examining all evidence recovered from the scene of the tragedy, but it would be days before anything could be expected from the forensics. No, it was much too early to declare the Astoria Incident either an accident or a terrorist attack; no, the deceased pilot was neither Middle Eastern nor a Muslim; his name was Kevin Lipton, a seven year employee of ZeroPoint, married with two young children, and no criminal record beyond a couple of traffic citations in his teens.

“Chief, whatever this event was, it seems to have triggered a great many meta-human breakthroughs,” a gimlet-eyed male reporter from Channel 4 asked. “What is the APD’s response to this? Can the city handle a sudden explosion of super-powered individuals? Er, no pun intended.”

“A potential influx of super-powered criminals is obviously a concern,” the Chief replied calmly. “While Astoria hasn’t had much in the way of such problems since the Second World War, SHADE and the federal government have offered whatever support we might need in the days and weeks to come. But the APD is not totally unprepared for this eventuality, and I have no doubt that our fine men and women in blue will step up to whatever challenges lay ahead.

“That said, they won’t have to do it alone… as we all saw today, not all the super-powers are in the hands of the deranged or the criminal. A handful of people went berserk today, whether by natural inclination or the stress of suddenly gaining powers, it will take time to tell. But at least seven other people kept their heads and did their civic duty – indeed, I’m not embarrassed to say that they took up the mantles of heroes today. They worked tirelessly with the other first responders and saved countless lives, at some risk to their own.

“Some of them are here with us this evening, so why don’t I let them speak for themselves?” He stepped away from the podium and gestured to Scion, who stepped forward, the others fanning out behind him.

“Ladies and gentlemen of the press,” he began, letting his helmet once more melt into his armor. “Most of you know me… indeed, it was you who gave me the name that most people now associate with me when I wear this armor.” That got a chuckle, if a nervous one. They all knew he didn’t particularly like the name, and he was often a prickly interview at best.

“Despite what some of you believe, I have never been opposed to using my abilities, all my abilities, to help people when they need it. And it is obvious to me that my city needs help right now, and perhaps for some time to come. So I want to reassure the citizens of Astoria that I intend to do everything I can to keep them safe, both as Scion and as John Jacob Astor VIII.” There, using his full name ought to really annoy his cousins.

“But I’m not alone in this determination. Behind me are others who feel their responsibilities to this city and her people just as strongly. Artemis, who has fought from the shadows for years, but who now chooses to step into the light.” Artemis bowed her head slightly, a faint smile on her lips. John was being very poetic, just as they’d discussed.

Totem, a Native shaman with some amazing abilities, has also stepped up today. Many who were injured might have died if not for his healing skills… not to mention his strength. I don’t think any of us will soon forget that image on tonight’s front page, of him in his Eagle form carrying an ambulance over the sea of stalled cars to those in need.

“The Blue Flame – a young man who gained his amazing powers only today, like so many others affected by the Incident. But unlike some of those others, he did not see that power as a license to run mad, to take what he wanted or to abuse others. Instead, the very first thought in his mind was “how can I help?” And then he found a way – if not for him much of the Silver Mile and the surrounding blocks might still be burning tonight –”

“What about the others?” a voice called out from the crowd. “Weren’t there seven of you out there–”

“Yes,” Scion interrupted the woman in turn. “There are others, who are not here now because they are hard at work in my lab studying the evidence we’ve uncovered and seeking the answers we all want and need about the origins of today’s horrific event. They too have made a commitment to do what must be done to protect this city and her people.”

Then an avalanche of questions was unleashed, most aimed at the known quantity of Scion… “Scion, are you putting together a team, then?” No.  “Scion, are you the leader of this team?” No. “Scion, will you be recruiting more members for your team?” >sigh< No.

But questions were directed at the others as well. Artemis took it all in stride, cooly answering those questions she choose to, and simply ignoring the rest; Jonny found himself suddenly tongue-tied, but did his best to answer what he could and hoped to hell he wasn’t saying anything that would give away his secret identity (then laughed inside at the thought that he had a secret identity).

Totem did well, Scion noted, right up until the moment a young blond woman elbowed her way to the front of the pack, and called his name. JJ could’ve sworn the man blanched… and the stoic look he’d worn all day, even in combat, slipped just a bit…

Totem!” the young woman repeated. ” Meg Halcyon, with the Daily Astorian. What tribe are you from, sir? Whom do you represent?”

“I represent all of the First Peoples, Ms. Halcyon,” Totem replied, visibly regaining control of his expression… but JJ thought he detected a ghost of a smile. “All tribes must stand together now, just as all good people, of all races, must stand together against evil. But as for my tribe of birth… I am of the Haida.”

She followed up with several more questions that let Totem pretty much lay out his philosophy as he’d explained it to JJ during lulls in the action earlier today. When she turned her attention to Scion, he was already inclined to call on her, but after she called him “Captain Astor” instead of Scion, the deal was sealed.

“Yes Ms. Halcyon?” he replied, mostly suppressing a smile.

“As the Chief alluded to earlier, we haven’t seen an heroic team in Astoria since WWII and Victory Flight… would you say that you here are the vanguard of a new heroic renaissance in the City of Tomorrow, sir?”

JJ did smile then, and actually chuckled, which caused the rest of the media pack to fall almost silent in surprise.

“You have a nice turn of phrase, Ms. Halcyon,” he said, leaning in to the mics. “Yes, whatever is coming in the days ahead, I think you can legitimately say that we are the vanguard of that change…”

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

Headline in the Oregonian, morning edition, 17 May 2016:

THE VANGUARD!
Scion Forms Super Team
in Astoria