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Messages - Terrorfexx

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Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XXVI - Arrant Thief


"The moon's an arrant thief, And her pale fire she snatches from the sun."



[The Past – TMT Marine Terminal, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA]

The flash of green and red navigation lights fight for attention as they gently sway from side-to-side, inducing a queasiness as they bob ahead of the vast steel-struck skyline on the opposite side of the riverbank. Office drones reduced to indistinct, nondescript silhouettes make for a hundred miniaturised cataracts that float across bright office windows as they scurry in some meaningless, unproductive triangle; made from email inboxes, photocopiers and bad coffee burnt to the glass.

Trapped in their concrete and metal prisons of polished glass and refrigerated drinking fountains, serving effective-life sentences of their own free will with the only difference being the luxury of making their cell a home in the fitful few hours between office calls. The rhythmic splash of water sloshing against pierside makes a lazy timpani for the atrophied snarl of a thousand internal combustion engines, idling in nose-to-tail traffic. Heat shimmer rising from a blanket of choking exhaust smog across the river makes the navigation lights on those tall, bobbing masts shift and warp and bleed into each other.

I press an edge of my heel down against the soft, rotting wood of the jetty and watch it depress and burst at the effort. Thick green algae spills out to either side, as if the structure itself is bleeding. Or leaking its corruption, its poison, into the wider world.

The unmistakable clack-clack-clack of stiletto against concrete echoes against the fibreglass hulls moored nearby, adding an off-beat interval to the lapping water’s effort. The stink of brackish water and industrial run-off fills my lungs, and I turn to watch the last time she will ever see any of this, ever again.

Cassiopeia, in brilliant red – it does so suit her – sweeps around the corner. Industrious, fast-paced. It does not suit a young woman to be dockside with nothing but the cityscape and the Moon to light the way and yet, she resolutely takes this same route home every evening. Perhaps she did not think it could happen again. It is why I knew where to find her.

It is how they have found her.

A group of four, stood leaning or squatting on the sun-bleached, fat bodies of abandoned storage crates and barrels. Burst open and ransacked, deformed by the elements and the weight of the thugs now waiting for their moment.

For their prey. For a flowergirl named after the stars, dressed all in red.

“Evenin’, Lady,” The tallest of the three men drawls as he moves out to stop her dead. She takes a step backwards but the other two have already circled around behind a strung-out section of wind-tossed plastic sheeting, standing against the way she came.

Panic manifests itself in so many curious ways. The involuntary jerking of limbs as the fight-or-flight reflex spins up on a heady, stomach-twisting cocktail of adrenaline and cortisone. Swallowing repeatedly, pursed and dry lips working in some silent affectation or prayer. Eyes narrowed, taking in the danger and desperately trying to categorise as the heart begins to hammer against the prison bars of its ribcage.

But then, curiously, it all seems to dampen down. A flicker of recognition passes over Cassieopia’s features and instead of heightening her anxiety, it seems to tamp down. Cooling. Her fists ball to match the fat hands of the three men forming an unwelcomely intimate triangle.

“... Been waiting a while to see you again.”

“Where’s your guardian angel?” The second of the three calls out, the slightest quiver in his voice betraying an absurd fear that very angel might inexplicably appear for having been summoned. Ironic, if he had only known how close she stood watching all of this work its way to such an inevitable, tragic conclusion.

She does not look over her shoulder, but instead finds those bobbing navigation lights out over the water. “ … And the angels who did not keep their positions of authority but abandoned their proper dwelling—these he has kept in darkness, bound with everlasting chains for judgement on the great Day …”

The third thug frowns, the thick fat folds of his face contorting. “Huh?”

“Bible shit I think. Guess she’s busy,” The first shrugs. “Same goes for that redhead bitch I’m guessing?”

Cassiopeia purses her lips and then finds his eyes with her own. “Miss Ryan’s been extremely busy, lately.”

The crash of splintering wood snatches all of their attention as the fourth member of the ambush strolls languidly into view, twirling a tyre iron in-hand.

The former talent manager of the former Bombshells’ World Champion watches the end of the metal bar spin. Recognition dawns. “Where’d you get that?”

The other woman, the newcomer, stops and turns to look at the fire-blackened tip, its protective plastic coating boiled and warped under tremendous heat. “Lying around, like all the rest of the trash. Like you will be soon enough, sweetheart.”

She runs a free, knuckle-scarred hand through her short-shaved scalp. “Seems as good a way as any to send you to yer’ … You know …”

“Oblivion,” Cassieopia replies. At that moment, I suspect she knows I am here and that I will do nothing to stop what is about to happen. It is time for her to learn her final, most painful lesson.

Hurricanes cannot help but destroy everything they touch, even by proxy. Even when they are hundreds of miles away. Even when they have stopped spinning and whirling. At least for a little while.

It is the flower girl dressed in red who makes the first move, to the point I am genuinely surprised. She closes the gap on the most talkative of the large men – the one directly ahead – and as he clumsily reaches out to seize her by the shoulder, she simply swings a pointed heel up between his legs. A grunt of pain fizzles out as his lungs are emptied by a diaphragm squeezed in tight and collapsed on itself. Cassieopia closes the distance and buries the sharp edges of her nails into his face, tearing. He howls, one agony forgotten in favour of another as he stumbles backward and falls.

She goes with him, ripping.

Cassieopia is still clawing even as she is lifted up and off her feet, cold metal pressed in tight against her throat and up hard under the chin. The man at her flailing feet rolls away, gasping and pawing at what is left of his face. The flower girl lashes out as best her untenable position allows; lacing the other woman with cuts and gouges but she is resolute. She is determined.

She squeezes tighter.

Stiletto heels clack-clack-clack on the concrete to a new, slurred rhythm – desperately scraping for purchase until it becomes disjointed and heavy, and yet …

… Cassieopia does not fight the tyre iron itself, even as her life is squeezed out. Instead, she fights the woman trying to take it. Leaden arms rise slowly and slice red ribbon-laced lines across cheeks that bulge with exertion and effort. Her blood flows, even as the flower girl’s drains from her face.

Objectively, the Human Body cannot operate for any significant length of time starved of oxygen. Basic cellular function continues for longer, but the complex movements associated with thinking, with fighting, expire in mere moments. Those moments stretch out now into entire hours contained within the mind’s eye – becoming an age and epic which soon seems to stop and hang on some new, impossible eternity.

But, of course, it does not. Objectively. It takes only seconds for Cassieopia’s fingers to fall away from their bloody work, arms swinging limply by her side. In just a few more, her head lolls forward and hugs the tyre iron pulled in tight, underneath. And then she does not move ever again.

My attention is not fully focused  on the end of her life, because even now – with so many variables accounted for and understood to the point I feel as though I have somehow directed it all, myself – I cannot help but think she will still intervene. Every crushed can tossed down from a rotting edge by the wind whips my composite face around and over my shoulder; each creak of tensioned, rusted metal chain as the river nearby tugs on the ship attached to its associated links steals my gaze.

I wait for my Resplendent Hurricane to somehow, someway, appear like an apparition all too many think me to be. Objectively, I know such a thing is impossible. I know exactly where Miss Ryan is; many hundreds of miles from this Iron Underbelly within the pit of which her former talent manager is being lowered to the concrete, limp and pale. There is no reason for her to be here, now, and she will learn about Cassieopia’s end whenever she deigns to leave the razor-topped walls that separate her world from this one.

And yet … I still expect it. Still imagine a rageful redhead in ripped jeans and bunched fists stalking across pierside, breaking jaws and saving the day.

I almost laugh, because the warm and reassuring embrace of precedence gives me comfort. Amber Ryan has never saved the day. She has never saved anyone. Not a Man in a Hat, not her Husband and not a Flower Girl Named After the Stars. Twice. She could not even save herself from making the same mistakes again and again.

The woman with the tyre iron sends it high into the night sky and out of sight, to disappear into the river water with a splash. Swallowed by the wail of sirens reverberating through a criss-cross maze of rusting shipping containers, blocking out the south side of the city. Those sirens belong to any number of other awful things being visited on people by each other, but not here.

Not to this particularly awful thing, that I feel so integrated with. Orchestrated.

But, of course, I did not. None of what is happening here, by the floating red and green navigation lights, against a backdrop of capitalism wrought in steel and polished glass, is my direction. This is simply the inevitable consequence of becoming associated with someone who does not suffer from anything as mortal as consequence, but only seems to pass through them whilst others bleed and die by the wayside.

All of this is the responsibility of Amber Ryan. The very same who so confidently broke those bones in ripped jeans in this very same dockyard, only a few months ago. The telltale scar under the chin of the thug helping his bloodied, torn partner up to his feet is testament to her actions and the efforts of surgeons to repair what can never be truly whole again…

Testament to the consequences which eluded her, and killed Cassieopia.

On that night, back then, I intervened. On that night, I saved my Resplendent Hurricane from herself. But those were different times. I was a different person. Before my Rapture was realised; before I understood my purpose.

While I mused, the thugs that took their revenge for a chance encounter all those months ago have slinked away between broken crates and burst, stinking drums. It is just me and the flower girl and I step out from where the shadows kept me hidden. With the toe of my heel I press down on the fluttering edges of her red coat, and capillary action from the damp concrete underneath makes it turn a dark crimson.

Blue and glassy eyes stare up, through me and through the Moon overhead. Squatting down, the servos of my prosthetic whine as its forefinger extends, plastic hovering a few inches above Cassieopia’s slack face. For a few moments I consider reaching to pull her eyelids closed in some instinctual gesture of tranquillity, but that is as misplaced as it is futile.

There is no peace to be had. She is dead …

And Amber Ryan killed her.




[The Rapture]

I am sorry that these lessons have been so painful, my Resplendent Hurricane, but you are a difficult pupil. In seven tumultuous and long years, you have repeatedly refused to learn and yet it feels as if we are nearing a breakthrough. Some seminal moment, an epiphany, a point at which you will finally reward my patience with that final step on what has been such a trying journey of self-realisation and actualisation.

At last, you will acknowledge a truth that you would otherwise previously have rather died than accept as gospel, sung from hymn books so that all the world as a congregation can join as one:

Your storm is spent; its winds stilled. Now is the time of my Rapture and you are already as good as dead. If not physically, then assuredly spiritually. In your soul. Without that – without your vaunted fire, you are as cold and silent as the gold which saw you risk everything for ultimately, nothing. The same gold which now belongs to me. Thermodynamics demands any system of something becomes nothing, and whether it is coldly categorised as entropy or given some nebulous, awe-inspiring label like fate, its effects are the same. Nothing lasts forever, and you have used up the last of your so-called immortality.

It is written in the intravenous drips and catheters you wore while bedridden, while being put back together from the sum of my most recent lesson. When you struggled to support your own bodyweight, arms trembling with the effort as you limped down a track penned-in by cold metal handrails, every step a rattling proclamation of the end of your reign as a so-called Queenpin.

Checkmate, my most beautiful redhead.

You measure yourself against the pitiful opposition you so expertly culled during your previous all-consuming reign. The three hundred and fifty seven days which made you think you could lay claim to ownership of the board and, perhaps, all its pieces therein. Fools and young children, cut down brutally and tossed on the pyre that burned to keep your legacy bright enough for all to see and acknowledge. To stoop and bow and curtsy.

Such egomania in someone so obsessed with appearing nonchalant. Such a dichotomy between who you would like to be, and who you inescapably, inarguably are.

A reign of three hundred and fifty seven days, hollowed out by the weakness in your bones and the weariness in your heart. The soft, pliable thing in your chest and not what you ultimately replaced with by proxy of Championship gold and sweat-stained leather. A reign held up by my thorn-painted hand as you dithered and struggled to reconcile your new-found feelings with a desire to remain imperious. To remain Amber Fucking Ryan.

Compassion. Empathy.

While you experimented with these poisons, they corrupted your purity of purpose. Oh, how wonderful you were before these new trinkets twisted your senses and blunted those murderous instincts. Even then, I strove to teach you valuable lessons; encouraging focus, preaching to eschew all those distractions and irrelevant factors and silly little flower girls named after the stars. And for a while, you listened. And you won.

And you were still Champion. Queenpin. A Resplendent Hurricane. A goddess made from fact and violence and given form to make her earthbound folk wither and turn away and find an excuse to avoid their reckoning today.

But, of course, it did not last. It could not, because the only thing that gave you purpose was the World Bombshells’ Title, and while that stood impregnable and impervious to mere feelings as any iron replacement for a heart could be, the body that carried it and the mind that directed it soon gave out. Such frailty; made mortal and cast back down to join all the rest of us in the mud and the shit.

I waited so very long before taking matters into my own thorn-painted hand. Perhaps it was because the poisons which had leached the lethality from those hollow bones had infected me; gave me reason to stay while I hoped you would come to your senses and rediscover the living weapon you could so easily otherwise have been. Were, before mundane concerns and trivial feelings burst your wonder and made rusted that reaping edge.

Perhaps I simply wanted to wait to maximise your suffering. Not only your suffering, but to the maximal pain and misery of others. Bane, Fexxfield, Jones – every one of them leeches draining the greatness from you to grow fat and however briefly in an otherwise uncaring universe, relevant.

For whatever reason ultimately drove me, I killed you.

Killed your reputation and your mystique. Here lies Amber Fucking Ryan, taken from her pedestal too soon.

And then they came for me because I had dethroned you and taken your place … But they did not come back again. All your supporters, your cheerleaders and sycophants and most worshipful believers, martyred on your behalf by me and elevated. Become something greater than merely the end of your story but instead, the beginning of mine.

But there is another number you should preoccupy yourself with considering.

Two thousand, five hundred and fifty five. Seven years.

For over two and a half thousand days, you have been unable to find a solution to the problem I present, and you have tried so many different methods. Ignore me, side with me, and ultimately defer to me and in the end, all of this has led you to fall back into the same tired behavioural feedback loops that define your entire life. A silly little carnival-girl who believes that pretending, make-believing herself aloof and untouchable will somehow translate into material reality. There is a perfectly sound alternative so cordially excited to meet your acquaintance; one in which you accept that all the qualities you so fervently believe make up your brand, your existence – you – can be found in me.

I am everything you wish you could be, Miss Ryan. Free from the petty concerns of ethics or trifling morality. I am the living weapon you could almost have been, save for your obsession with maintaining meaningless trinkets like friends and your husband made bane by nature and name. Gumshoes and walking constellations in cherry-red heels, an eclectic mix of broken souls all helping to hold together the fragments of a psyche which only ever existed in your mind’s eye.

Look upon all the things I have accomplished in a fraction of the time it took you likewise. Consider the legacy I have built as an afterthought in dismantling yours. 

Is it jealousy that drives you? Fear? Of what? Inadequacy, perhaps. Of realising that you are worthless if you are not what you have always told everyone you are. A force of nature, a hurricane that cares not and wants not but simply is. Simply destroys.

I imagine that on Sunday, I will have to kill you to keep you from climbing back to your feet. Because no mere arbitrary three-count or momentary submission would do in terms of stakes versus which you can once again hurl your broken body against. Because in the end, perhaps there has been no breakthrough at all. No epiphany.  And so there is only one question for which I have no answer.

It is not how to defeat you, because I have already defeated you. In body broken with tyre iron and love, and in mind when you pressed your lips against mine. You really are so very beautiful in fluorescent strip-light.

It is not what happens after the lights in California dim and your eyes flicker open in the all-too-familiar surroundings of an Intensive Care Unit, serenaded by the electronic lullaby of a dozen chirping machines and safely buried in a cocoon of clear plastic tubes. Because there is nothing beyond Inception. This is the end, Amber. The only question left to answer is …

… How many times do I have to kill you, girl?




[The Past – Atlantic City Medical Examiner, Linwood, New Jersey, USA]

Had a whole story concocted up to get through the reception and into the back – probably the only time anyone ever tried to sneak into a morgue, but turns out to be a whole bunch of thinking time wasted. Guard behind the desk to my right barely lifts his brow up, let alone eyes, and those stay glued to the tablet making tinny whirling sounds as his fingers tap rapidly across its grease-smeared plastic.

So I just bustle on through and push the doubleset doors ahead apart. The muffled thumps of my well-worn shoe leather turn into crisp echoes as threadworn carpet underneath gets exchanged for faded, lime-green tile. Where the edges are bevelled and hidden from the rattling wheels of gurneys and the bootie-wrapped, scuffed footsteps of their attending orderlies, their original brilliant colour hides. Survives.

Then the smell hits me, strong enough to make out like I might just gag on it. A heady perfume of eye-watering antiseptic, floating over the unmistakable stink of decay. Not spoiled fruit left out too long, but ordered and structured rot mitigated as best medical science delivered on a county budget can manage.

Know that cocktail only too well. Can’t say I miss it.

Fluorescent lights overhead make the washed-out walls, smeared in white gloss, even harder to look at. Everything is reflective and sterile except the line of frost drawing perfect outlines of the refrigerator hatches set into the far side. That tells a story …

Or, maybe, marks the end of one.

“Can I help you?”

She’s hard to pick out for a second – pale blue scrubs underneath a white overcoat, face mostly hidden by a surgical mask pulled in tight – but the cluster of pins attached to her lapel give me bearing to find her eyes fixed on mine. There’s a black heart, miniature metal key swinging underneath; a few caustic references to good days and bad and a fair mix of accompanying swear words, but there’s a guarded kindness above the mask that offers reassurance. Comfort.

It’s not going to be okay … How could it be? But maybe we can pretend a while.

“Sorry, Doc,” I offer, sweeping the hat from my head. “Here to see the flower girl.”

She frowns and takes a step forward and just a little bit of that kindness goes someplace else. “Pardon?”

“Cassieopia Mearns,” I clarify and she relaxes. “Name’s Terryl Fexxfield.”

Reaching over for a clipboard, the Doctor nods. “You called earlier. Don’t suppose your family?”

“Nope.”

“Friends?”

“Would’ve liked to have been,” I reply.

She tosses the clipboard back onto the stainless steel tabletop with a clatter. “I suppose I don’t need this then. Guess that’s why you called first.”

“Appreciate the favour.” But I don't. Not really. Who would, given the circumstances.

Making her way over to the bank of refrigerators, the Doc gives the handle of one of the units a sharp twist and it takes all my self-composure not to flinch at the clang of the lock as it disengages. “I’ve seen enough thoughtless murder in this cesspool to know nobody’s going to work particularly hard to find out who did this to her. Just another statistic. If you can help, if you’re willing, I can look the other way on the paperwork.”

Then she tugs the integrated gurney out and that all-too-familiar face, framed with blonde and all waxen and pale, emerges from a twinkling cloud of ice crystals and billowing, antiseptic vapour.

Christ. Not again.

Takes a few moments to steel myself strong enough to talk and she waits, patiently. It’s how I know that for everything this miserable city has taken from – from people like Cassie lying there – I know it hasn’t changed me. Chipped away, got underneath the paint and made it bubble up with scabs of rust, maybe. Hollowed out and made the structure tired and weak … Definitely, but the substance has stayed true.

I’m still me, because my heart feels just as heavy seeing this as it did any other time someone got what they didn’t deserve.

It doesn’t take long to see what put her to sleep forever, and against that pale skin the sickly half-moon smile of bruising underneath her chin stands even prouder. I pretend like I’m putting more effort into examining the wound than I really am, because I know how this happened. Knew how it was going to happen. The whole sorry story laid out on the bookshelf like some cut-price novel, waiting to tempt badly-organised travellers at rail stations and airports the world over.

“You said you know who did this?”

I shake my head. “Don’t know who …”

Something like anger flashes across those kindly eyes and her hand instinctively – protectively – goes to the gurney handle to push Cassie back inside the refrigerator. “That’s not what you said, listen … If you’re one of those–”

“Said I knew what happened to her,” I interrupt, watching the door shut with an anticlimactic thump courtesy of its thick rubberised seal. “Not a matter of who, but what.”

The Doctor frowns. “I don’t understand, Mister Fexxfield.”

“A situation,” I clarify. “Got caught up between two irreconcilable differences. Got torn in half by them.”

The lock swings shut with that same, shaking boom. “Just sounds like another metaphor for awful people to me,” She shrugs.

Can’t argue, and I flip over the hat in my hand and set it down on my head. “We’re all awful people, Doc. Some of us are more than that, though. Some of us are forces of nature.”

I push the heavyset door open, letting the whiff of traffic fumes and stale coffee from the reception room beyond clear out the medical stink in my chest.

“What kind of forces?”

Holding the door open, I pause for a few moments. “Hurricanes …”

No, that just doesn’t feel like the right description anymore. This isn’t about a storm and the world it passes through. It’s become some twisted diarchy; two opposing things, equal and terrible.

She takes a step forward. “Mister Fexxfield?”

“Feels more like the Sun and the Moon,” I toss over a shoulder, taking one myself and letting the door bang closed behind without looking back.




[The Rapture]

Is it jealousy that drives you? Fear? Of what? Inadequacy, perhaps. Of realising that you are worthless if you are not what you have always told everyone you are. A force of nature, a hurricane that cares not and wants not but simply is. Simply destroys …

… But over these last two thousand, five hundred and fifty-five days, I have come to realise that the wrong metaphor has been applied. You are not a swirling hurricane. Rageful winds and whirling chaos. You are the Sun, burning furious and bright and threatening. Incandescent and awe-inspiring; eye-drawing. Dominating of the sky and everything in it. Unwilling to share, uneasy at coexistence with anything that might question or compete.

A slavering, hungering ego lies at your nuclear-hot core, desperate for validation. Not for anything as uncouth as money or the typical trappings of fame. Instead, you crave respect. That sickening yearning for fear. Above all else, you want people to fear you, Amber. The uneasy murmuring that robs a full-throated room of its roar when you cross its threshold, the subtle nods from those that might on their best day catch you cold on your worst, but will not. Not today. Not ever, because they are scared.

Not money. Not fast cars. Fear is the currency you wish to see exchanged for bodily acts of violence in your name, by your fists.

I have come to realise in these last few months, since taking your heart and making it mine as Bombshells’ World Champion, that I have eclipsed you. This is no longer a question of influence, of machinations and plots and subterfuge. The epicentre of this – of all of this – does not lie in you, but me.

Your radiance is dimmed and the flames that once licked and burnt at the clouds are cut across by the black orb of my ascension. It is not simply that I sentinel the night when you choose to turn away. I am more than a reflection of your fury and power and presence held out of sight for a spell.

I have taken everything from you and made it mine.

That, however, is where our eclipse-esque metaphor draws to an end because unlike the transitory nature of the Moon’s zenith over the Sun, our equivalent has no such sudden end or reversal of fortune. This heart of yours made mine, this Championship, stays on that dark side away from your furious, rageful red light.

And why should I not? Why should I stop at simply robbing you of your light and plunging all things into a more peaceful, more calming darkness. Granted, there is such beauty in the nocturnal; where all things rest and recuperate and a blessed silence falls over everyone and everything. Such an antithesis to your sound and fury and metal-on-metal clanging. But it is not enough. I think I would like more.

I think I would like to be you. More than you … And I think I have done so very well at doing so.

Look to the way I have resisted the toxicity of the title that has otherwise riddled you with the disease of self-doubt; eroding your resilience and crumbling your willpower and robustness to fine ash. Like the cinders swept out of Oblivion, razed to the ground by the hubris of one half of the Bane-Ryan machine. Imagine becoming embrittled by the cancer of your own perception of excellence. A psychosomatic wound that has become terminal, made you into nothing from something that was once so wonderful.

Here lies Amber Fucking Ryan née Phaethon, son turned daughter of Helios. Who took their father’s chariot made the Sun become the SCW World Bombshells’ Championship, and hurt so many so widely with an inability to wield it or control it. Who allowed it to consume them, and where it touched the Earth it burnt the land to desert and where it disappeared into the stratosphere it froze all under thick tundras of ice.

Oh, for all those who suffered while you tore through this company as Champion, oscillating wildly between teeth-grit rage and stand-offish cool. How Mac dealt with the choice wounds you cut into his soul, all under the guise of independence. A free-spirit. Because that is who you are. A hollow, pathetic justification to explain away all the cruel things you have visited on everyone foolish enough to dare to cross your path without a cross word, once in a while.

You were weak in mind, transferring your self-respect and self-confidence into an inanimate object as if that could endure more successfully outside of your psyche than in. Weak in body, because I have broken it utterly and what stands across from me on Sunday, in California, is some hastily-repaired imposter.

The real Amber Ryan is dead. I killed her, so many times. This is a remnant, more suited to the umbral shadow of the Moon than the Sun she once represented. A breeze in lieu of a hurricane, robbed of her gravitas and reduced to the role of spectator to the coronation of a new Queenpin. Her crown placed upon my head and with it, proclaimed Regina.

You have watched me take everything from you from your hospital bed. Your place in the panoply of this company, to replace your monotheistic cult under the One True Painted Hurricane with a new Diarchy and polar opposites. Your past; accolades and accomplishments rendered moot when considered against the reality – pay no attention to the redhead behind the curtain, furiously pulling brass levers and twisting dials and working her terrifying visage with its clockwork mouth and steam-powered smirk.

Your present, left broken on the floor of a boiler room in Long Beach. Your future, taken as I took your protege, Miss Blackthorn, under my tutelage. I find it a powerful parallel that she, too, was abandoned by those that should have done so much better by her. I wonder what rationalisations you tell yourself to justify that particular betrayal. There have been so many.

Curious, that you manage somehow, some way, to retain those that still believe in your message, despite such proclivities for the turncoat persuasion. Your proclamation. The Gospel of the Distorted Angel. Oh, I remember that title well.

I wonder if Terryl does, too?

I was there, Amber. Two thousand, five hundred and fifty five days ago in Atlantic City. I gave you the first of many tests, all of which you have failed spectacularly. As you were destined to fail. Because despite the passage of time and all the wounds and agonies it has brought, you have learned nothing. Incapable of change, of personal growth.

Do you remember how he looked at you, when you decided a title was more important than what I believe may well have been true love? You will have to forgive me for approximating, since I am not sure what love is. I think I have been in it.

I think I loved you. I think I still do. I think I understand why so many huddle under the warmth of a fleeting moment of your attention. They line up so desperately, and they vie for your transitory interest like mayflies. But you do not really care for them. Perhaps that is the only difference between all these people and their love.

They believe in delusion or denial that you feel the same, whereas any affection you showed me was as calculating as it was artificial. Oddly, that comforts. To watch Mac eviscerate himself emotionally, spiritually, under the pretence he is simply supporting rather than enabling your worst impulses. To watch – to enjoy – Terryl shorten his professional career and personal life repeatedly, for the privilege of watching you give up time and time again. The things you did to My Songbird, Matthew …

For poor Cassieopia, the second flower girl named after the stars you have upended and ruined. Tell me, does your insistence that they did what they did, to love you, support you, of their own free, will give you comfort too? Is it easier to ignore the contribution you made to their damnation, rather than accept culpability?

Your former protege, now mine, Miss Blackthorn, once said that the difference she saw in me was one of truth. That unlike all of the others, unlike you, I did not hide behind layers of misdirection, falsehoods spun into wicked narratives to advance your own desires and frustrate others’. Is it not ironic that here, now, at the end of everything we have ever done together, that I am the one most content with my truthfulness and transparency?

Everything I have ever done, every act committed by my thorn-painted hand, was laid out and foretold. You cannot say the same and, I think, you would simply smirk and toss that red mane over your shoulder and shrug.

Line up your personal retinue of lovestruck fools, both matrimonial, platonic and somewhere ambiguously in-between, and ask them otherwise. Pointless, an exercise in futility, because it does not matter what anyone else thinks.

The only words that matter, truthful or not, are those of Amber Fucking Ryan.

It is a remarkable study in the depths of Human ability for self-obfuscation. To be faced with so many opportunities to step from the path that leads to only disappointment, destruction and the end of everything you have worked for and stay that same path through to the bitter, tearful end shows the ultimate perversion of the illusion of choice.

I do wonder how many of them will be left, at the end. They do so seem to wilt while you thrive, like sacrificial Pawns in some greater game to protect their Queen.

There will be no such choice on Sunday, at Inception. Instead there will simply be the administration of a final test: not for you, but me.

Am I the Moon, destined only to eclipse your light and take it away? Rob the world of the Sun and replace it with nothing – the absence of Amber Ryan? Or have I taken her place? Become the new centre of this universe and everything in it. A test whose conclusion is largely independent of the outcome as far as you are concerned, because both represent a final, unequivocal end.

I once told you I thought we were destined to this forever, My Love, but I was wrong and you have outgrown your usefulness. Perhaps once, you could have been something truly terrifying. Something to shake the walls of this world itself and bring everything crashing down as you walked, imperiously, free and uncaring. But you are not what you once were, and I am so much greater.

Are you not proud of what you have helped to make? Everything I have done, have become, is because of you. Once upon a time I was merely an insubstantial reflection; an arrant thief stealing my pale fire from your greatness and wonder and beauty. Maybe when your eyes roll open to that soft and familiar electronic lullaby, surrounded by worried faces and their sycophantic owners in some private medical suite in downtown Las Vegas, you will finally learn a lesson of substance.

That there are oh so many things worse than death. I will show you every last one of them.

It is time to put an end to whatever it is that wears the face of Amber Ryan, like a mask, and would have the world believe she still walks. I am cold, and I think I would like to walk in the warmth of the sun for a while. Maybe after you are gone, I will dispense with mine. Maybe, after you are gone, I will go by my real name.

Abigayle DeLune, SCW World Bombshells’ Champion.

On Sunday, I think I will have to kill you to prevent you from climbing back to your feet, but that is okay.

I have killed you so many times before.




2
The Case of the Wrongs Darker than Death or Night

Edgemont Cemetery
Scarsdale, New York, USA
29th December, 2022


The sun is clear up in a pale blue sky, but winter has made her shine something less bright and altogether more sickly. Cold air bristles hairs on the back of the neck that stand proud of a faded and over starched collar, making the man in the hat pull the thick lapels of his greatcoat tightly in about himself as he drops down the short distance to the bench below. Breath billows out in a swirling clouds as he buries his hands in his pockets, looking out on the row of stone and marble-carved memorials.

“Thought it was about time we met,” Fexxfield says out loud, without turning to look at the man already sitting on the bench to his right. “Could spend the next year trying to learn through sleuthing what might well come easier just by asking.”

He pulls the fedora free from his slick-parted hair, marred only by the pencil-thin line of a scar that runs neatly around the top of his temple and hairline. The rim is threadbare where he circles it around and between his fingers. “Man like you only leaves information out there he wants to be found,” Terryl continued, adding a nod slightly off centre and over towards the cityscape and high-rises. “Hear you’ve got a big choice to make.”

Glancing down at the worn fabric, he frowns. “Caught between a Hurricane and the Rapture. That’s the word out between the tall buildings and back-alleys, anyway.”

“Caught is an interesting turn of phrase.” Replied Gabriel, never taking his eyes off the small marble stone embedded into the ground. “One would infer that being caught is a suggestion of being without choice. And whilst that appears to be the chaotic order of things, I can assure you - my place is no accident.”

Gabriel paused and slowly turned his head to face the visitor and offered him a smile before extending his hand.

“Doctor Gabriel Baal.” He said, matter of factly.

“Caught more to the mind that you haven’t decided which one is the lesser of two mighty terrible things.” He glanced over and took the proffered hand. “Name’s Fexxfield. Terryl, if we’re on first name terms.”

Silence squeezed back into the narrow space between them for a few moments. “Or greater of two terrible things, depends on your angle.”

He settled back on the row of immaculately carved memorials set into the cold, damp ground. “She used to say there was no such thing as monsters. Just monstrous people, but she was wrong.”

Fexxfield leaned back against the wind-bleached wood of the bench. “Abigayle is a monster, made by other people like any number of fairytales make-believe, but one all the same. Find it hard to believe a man like you really holds her up as one side of a perfectly-balanced scale of choice. Feels more like leverage, or hedging …”

Puffing his cheeks out, Terryl pulled in the folds of his greatcoat and set his hat down on his lap. “Then again, ran into a few men like you. Lucky to walk away from them, all things considered … Something I didn’t do enough to avoid such unpleasant situations in the first place.”

“Like you,” the gumshoe reiterated, “ … But different. None of the rest of them had children, to my knowledge. Always thought that gave someone a new perspective on an old situation. And yet …”

A frown creased his stubbled face. Eventually, Fexxfield looked over – again – at Baal. “Don’t really understand why this is still dressed up as a choice. Is it just to throw folk off? Keep them guessing? Amber’s like a poor attitude to fire safety in some leafy, countryside nursing home; a tragedy waiting for a chance to get going. But Abigayle’s a monster. Plain, if anything but simple.”

“I have experience with monsters. Created them, moulded them, stood side by side with them.” Gabriel said, almost wistfully. “I’ve also stood opposed to them as well - though, my wife has even greater experience than even I.”

Gabriel paused, his eyes focused on the memorial in front of him.

“But it’s not always the monsters that do the most terrible things.” He said, a slight quiver in his voice. “This memorial is for my brother - Quentin. He was murdered by a man… just a man. Afraid of those who held onto the chain around his neck. I forgave Uriel for his transgression as it was one he would never have chosen but for fear.”

Gabriel’s mind wandered, thinking back to that time, four years earlier.

“My son is named for two men killed in a war that they had no part of. My brother and Eden’s father - both lives wasted needlessly in an effort to turn those that I loved and cared about against me. And yet, the men who set those events into motion were no monsters. They were just men, afraid of what I could do to them.” Gabriel paused for a second. “Their lofty stations no longer exist - their titles and their wealth was stripped away. They were left as little more than the terrified children that tried to play games with my life.”

Gabriel turned his head slowly towards Terryl and paused.

“So tell me, Mr. Fexxfield….” Gabriel added quietly. “Do you honestly believe that I don’t understand the complexity of this situation?”

“Not lack of understanding that has me on edge,” He replied. “Got me feeling the tips of my loafers biting into nothing but thin air. Not that, Doc …”

A thick smear of cloud drags itself across the pale, flat disc of the winter sun and dims it a touch, giving the wind a new and harder edge as it bites. “What worries me is you know exactly what you’re doing, even though you can’t know someone who doesn’t even know themselves–”

He grimaces, jaw twisting with the thought and a hasty correction. “Something. Abigayle, Masque – a monster by any other name but still – doesn’t even know what she is. Flips through motivations, reasonings and feelings as effortlessly as you diagnose the ailments of the spirit and prescribe some chicken soup for the soul. Say what you like about a certain Painted Hurricane but for all her faults and flaws, and I’d be right in line with a dozen others to list them off if it came down to it, even she operates within the boundaries of a behavioural model. Yeah, constraints. Imagine it.”

Fexxfield chuckles, shrugging his shoulders. “She wouldn’t take kindly to the notion, but it’s true. That She-Witch on the other hand … If she has any sort of coherent playbook, the pages get jumbled up and rewritten on a near-daily basis.”

The laughter gets whipped away on the cold wind. “You’re a far smarter man than me, Doc. I just walk these streets a spell, but you run them, or at least the people who do. That doesn’t square with what I know about Abigayle …”

His eyes pass over Quentin’s marker., and he nods at it. “ … And the only person who knows her better than I do has one of those and isn’t talking. Never will again.”

“Know you’ve met her,” Fexxfield adds. “Know you’ve talked, so you can’t lay any claim to ignorance. Question is given you know … Why take the risk at all? Why not back the red horse less likely to buck your head clean free of your shoulders even if you give it everything it ever wanted?”

“I’m not one for the easy path, Mr. Fexxfield.” Gabriel said quietly. “It’s too easy - it’s what other people do. That being said, there is every chance that I could do precisely what you’ve suggested. It could be Amber. It could be Abigayle. There is a lesser considered third option where it’s neither… but in this, chaos will decide.”

Gabriel said picking lint from his trousers.

“Let me tell you a story.” Gabriel said, clearing his throat and leaning back just a little more. “I once had a patient that came to me to tell me about his friends. They were the only friends he had in the world, and yet… they didn’t get along with one another. Little by little, they were tearing him apart making him choose. They’d force him to pick, and when he couldn’t choose, they’d both arrive and then he’d be torn apart in person. Watching them cut one another with their sharp tongues.”

Gabriel shifted slightly.

“He was depressed. Severely. And the only thing worse than the idea of watching them both rip one another to shreds, was having to choose between the two. As the weeks went on, no matter what advice I gave it was getting worse and worse. It was as though they were listening, and everytime I had an answer they’d change the rules. He was so close to losing everything. And then I realised… It took me much longer than it should have taken me considering… ” Gabriel shook his head and chuckled. “Well that’s a story for another time. I realised that he didn’t have… any friends. They were both in his head. Visualisations. Spectors. Figments of the very worst parts of his imagination. So when he made a change, they knew how to counter. It was clinically beautiful.”

Gabriel reached up and scratched his forehead.

“But I was able to make him see that, in reality, he was in control. Knowing that fact was the real power… because where they had once been a step ahead, just like that…” He clicked his fingers. “He was the one with the choices. They were bound to the limits he set, and suddenly, choosing wasn’t painful anymore - it was a gift.”

Gabriel looked at Terryl.

“Amber and Abigayle… they play these games, but one of them is always in control. Add in someone like me and the game changes. Add someone like me who sees the game for what it is, and like it or not, neither one of them knows who steers the direction. This creates uncertainty - and whilst uncertainty to a women like Abigayle creates danger, for someone like Amber it creates opportunity. And suddenly, this game is… Tantalisingly dangerous. And they say, a little chaos never hurt anyone.” Said Gabriel with a smirk, turning his head back to the memorial. “Is that why we’re having this conversation? Is that what you’re concerned about?”

“Concerned about the war in Ukraine,” Fexxfield ventured with a click of his tongue. “Concerned about rising crime in inner cities and whether I can justify investing in an electric car now given how well Elon’s tanking his own business …”

“Beyond concerned,” He added with a shake of his head. “Am tied to both of them with chains and ribbon, and the jerking from side-to-side is beginning to bruise me purple. No longer an active participant; not like you or Amber or … Her … Just swept up in something too powerful to face down.”

Interlocking his fingers together, Terryl rested them on his lap. “As for the reasoning behind our conversation … Wanted to see whether it was megalomania, delusion, or something more dangerous that makes you think you can just insert yourself into this whole thing with some semblance of control.”

“Dangerous like you might actually be able to do it,” He mused, tipping his head back to look up at the storm-tossed sky. “Dangerous like you, Doc, unlike all the others, might somehow have something about you that makes it possible to steer the path of a hurricane or see in a rapture. God – or if he’s dead and we killed him, random fate – knows I can’t. Never could. Reason why Abigayle and Amber have both been competing to see who could kill me slower. Only difference is one doesn’t mean to do it even while she squeezes my heart flat.”

Terryl sighed. “But then again, me, the lady and the eldritch horror masquerading literally as one, we’ve been doing this for what feels like forever. Almost ten years, with no sign of stopping. Maybe you’re the means to an end we’re all begging for, even if it’s for wildly differing reasons.”

“Maybe you’re supposed to be getting involved,” He ventured.”Maybe you should never have come here. All I know is, you’ve got the look of a man who knows loss. Knows how that hurts like a splinter deep in the soul that keeps opening up old psychosomatic wounds. Knowing that, suppose I still don’t really see why with everything you’ve got to lose, you’re willing to gamble.”

“If you’d ever met my wife, you’d understand. She was the most fantastic gamble I ever took. We hated one another once upon a time. She helped to destroy everything I’d ever manage to build. She tore out my heart and crushed it time and again. And then she collected the pieces and managed to put them back together again, in a way that was wholly better than it had been before.” Said Gabriel, with a musing smile. “Sometimes, the greatest risk begets the greatest reward. Sometimes your final throw of the dice is the one that changes your life.”

Gabriel took a deep breath, and it turned into a heady sigh.

“But it does need to end, Terryl. One way or another - for Amber. For Abigayle. For you and for all of the other collateral damage. It has to stop. Because you’re right - they’ve danced this same dance for far too long. Someone needs to step in to change the tune.” Gabriel considered, before turning his head to face his visitor. “What does your heart desire? What is the ideal end for Terryl Fexxfield?”

Sitting up, the gumshoe’s eyes linger on the ordered row of memorials across neatly-trimmed plots – all resplendent with fresh flowers. Their letters are embossed and clear; entropy hasn’t worn away their intricately carved facades, or left their bright tributes to wilt and rot.

“You’re right about that, Doc,” He nodded, turning the hat in his hands over. “It’s got to end. Tried once or twice, but just ended up becoming part of the carnival. Couldn’t get out of the twirling colours and flashing lights. Everything turned into a blur and now I can’t think straight. Not when it comes to Amber. She fuzzes everything up. Makes even the binary choices into logic trees with deadends. Always has. And as for that She-Witch …”

For a few moments, Fexxfield balls his fists tight until the skin pops pink in the cool air. Eventually, he lets them relax with a long puff of condensed breath that floats up and out of sight. “Turns me into something I’m not. Never have been. Thing is, I don’t even think she knows what her endgame is …”

Abruptly, he looks over at Gabriel. “She’s a twin, you know. Identical. Spent most of her life locked away – rightly, in my book, given how she’s turned out – for problems in the meat of her head. Got it in there that she was her sister. Annabelle …”

Fexxfield turned his head back towards the memorials. “My wife, until she passed a few years ago. But then, feel like you already knew that.”

Gabriel lowered his eyes in respect of the memory of Terryl's wife. A confirmation that he did, indeed, know.

“I did.” He said quietly. “I can’t imagine–”

But Terryl continued, not allowing Gabriel to finish that sentence.

“Don’t know what I want, Doc,” Terryl added as he set the hat back on his head and tugged the brim down. “Heart’s been cut up and put back together so many times it doesn’t know what to feel about anything, anymore.”

He climbed up to his feet, brushed some imagined dust from the folds of his greatcoat and stepped away. “Congratulations by the way – not easy to make a life, something new. Everyone else around here is an expert in ruining them.”

“Terryl.” Gabriel called as Fexxfield started to walk away. He was pleased to see his visitor pause. He turned slowly to face Gabriel who climbed to his feet and fastened his jacket. “I don’t know you well, but I pride myself on being a rather good judge of character. I know the life you have isn’t the life you want.”

Gabriel reached into his pocket, and for a second he saw Fexxfield’s guard spring up. But when he withdrew his hand, there was nothing untoward.

“I can help you. And if it’s something you’re open to, I will help you.” Gabriel said, holding out his hand to show a business card - two numbers. Business and personal. “I have room within my organisation for smart people who can find things. And with that offer comes hope for a new life - one that breaks you away from everything you’re tied to now.”

Gabriel allowed the since to hang between them for a moment or two.

“I’m not arrogant enough to tell you that you need my protection. But I’m intelligent enough to know that my resources and my network can change your future.” He said quietly. “Those who I work with… they’re treated fairly. That’s the promise I make.”

The silence hangs a little longer, turning from passing acquaintance to unwanted lodger and eventually, wary bedfellows. After a few long, drawn-out moments, Fexxfield takes the proffered card and scans either side.

“Might sound needlessly hyperbolic, Doc, but can’t be on the side of anything dark. Appreciate this world and everything – and everyone – on it doesn’t always fit neatly into either scale in-between the moral pivot point, but have to be clear. Won’t do wicked work …”

He hesitates, letting that silence come around for a second chance. “ … But willing to work, if the circumstances make me feel less like I’m waist-deep in the mud, trying to push other folks around me down by their heads.”

“Not all of my work is nefarious, Mr. Fexxfield. And despite notions created by your recent associations, most people aren’t wholly good or wholly bad. You would have the freedom to work as you see fit.” Said Gabriel, extending his hand. “It’s been a pleasure meeting you, Terryl.”

Reaching out, Fexxfield meets it with his own. “Hope it turns out to be, Doc,” He nods as he takes his leave, turning to pick a path back towards the lattice of burnished iron railings which pick out the cemetery’s perimeter.

“ … Hope it turns out to be.”


3
The Case of the Girl with the Broken-Glass Heart

Part I

Mercy General Hospital
Seattle, Washington, USA
14th October 2014


Air shouldn’t sound different depending on who’s taking it deep into their lungs. Just a bunch of oxygen molecules spinning through the ether, bumping into each other every day or a pair of nitrogen atoms every other; maybe on some special occasion, a trace noble gas. The rest of the world whirls and spins and in those quieter moments, just turns for a spell but air is just that. Just is.

Shouldn’t sound different depending on who, or what. But it does.

The ventilator takes another long, stuttering breath on her behalf and pauses at the apex. Like some newborn that abruptly stops and holds it just long enough to make your head whip towards the baby monitor and jerk up from the mattress, it waits until I look over and then finally exhales with a rattle of its stretched plastic diaphragm. The stink of metal, antiseptics and rubber blow out from the rear baffle and swirl the other smells all around the cramped room. Things that really stink, and something that I know can’t really get by on a smell, but lights up the brain all the same.

Death.

The science behind the machine that labours on behalf of the birdcage-like chest of my wife is simple enough. It does the same job her lungs are too atrophied, pulped and swollen to do and yet in their rush to make it work as well as its biological facsimile could, or should, the boffins that put this ventilator together didn’t pay so much attention to what it sounds like as it worked.

Here was something that perfectly replicated the most essential and natural thing for anything that lived – to breathe – and made it sound as unnatural as (in)humanly possible. Long days spent listening had given me plenty of opportunity to think on what was missing. At first I’d settled on feeling, coming to think that maybe it was the fact the machine didn’t ever change its cyclical draw. Real people pant when they’re angry or upset, or their breath slips away to something gentle and soft when they let their eyes roll closed and forget about that whirling world they’re struggling to keep steady footing on. This thing never gets excited, or worried. Or anxious. Or relaxed. It just keeps going.

But that wasn’t it. Turns out, after those long days became long weeks by her bedside, I’d only been half right. It wasn’t feeling the ventilator couldn’t give me over and above what it was giving Annabelle – it was one in particular.

It didn’t replicate the feeling of fighting for your life.

The ventilator didn’t gasp. It didn’t gurgle or cough or hack or wheeze or gag. It didn’t stop doing its job and leave you wide-eyed and scarlet-red flushed, flailing and lashing in autonomic desperation. That was it. This thing underplayed the agony and the deterioration that made it needed in the first place.

It takes another plastic breath on her behalf and breathes out its own chemical excess. This machine doesn’t care about what led to what was left of the woman in the bed needing a proxy. Her whole struggle was marginalized and ignored in favour of just doing the job it was designed so incompletely to do.

The bitter chuckle rolls out from between my dry lips before I can stop it. Struggle? Sounds like some Made-for-TV metaphor for what’s really going on here.

Her long, drawn-out death.

Thoughts of TV and the silver screen quickly kill my chuckle, in much less time than what I’m being made to watch play out will. The ease at which my mind conjures up these brutal comparisons doesn’t jar my sensibilities in the same way each ventilated rasp needles at my patience.

TV and Film have painted a lot of inaccuracies in their long course of distorting the truth pursuing a good story, or at least one you’ll either pay to watch or sit through the adverts between. Most egregious of which is their home-brewed idea of what was going to happen in the bed next to me.

Folk with terminal illness don’t become oracles in their last few weeks. No veil of peace descends over their worldy concerns, rendering their counsel sage and all things to all people. Like some key making a cosmic lock open with a god-given, angel-heralded click and suddenly the meaning of life is something they can just reach in, pull out and understand. That golden plate or whatever that magic box contains doesn’t explain their place in all of it, doesn’t hold some rationale for why they’ve got to shuffle off the mortal coil a few thousand turns of this rock early.

Their last few weeks are filled with all the same kind of fear, uncertainty and confusion that makes each and every one of us hollow. Only difference is they’re out of time to try to figure it all out – and that just makes the whole sorry thing that much more fearful, uncertain and confusing.

Forget about weeks too. The Doctors are almost always wrong. They stick to conservative estimates, that way you can only ever be grateful for more time, not angry there was less … But the fact is life wants to live, and give it a slither of an opportunity to last one more day with the full array of wonder of medical science, and you better believe it will. Forget weeks; they last for months. Longer sometimes.

And every day that lasts one more than expected makes them wish it hadn’t. Depends on what put them there, but in the end it doesn’t matter. It eats them from the inside-out or makes them too weak to take a single breath. Both, if your luck is flat-out like their limp palms, turned up towards the fluorescent lamps in false ceiling spaces above.

Annabelle’s heart swelled up to the size of some under-inflated basketball; straining at her ribs as it struggled to beat in one cohesive thump until eventually, it could hardly manage that. Drugs that made her bleed from her eyes, implanted electrodes that turned her whole chest angry and blotched – all to convince the thing to struggle on while her lungs dried out and gave up their work to the incessant click-gasp of the ventilator still wheezing away in the background.

They don’t just sit in their beds, waiting to die either. Mind withers along with the body and before you know it, you’re watching your wife ask who you are, or talking about careers they’ve never had or friends they’ve never known. Sometimes she used to just try to get up, even when they intubated her and when that wasn’t enough, strapped her down with black cuffs shackled to the stainless-steel sidings of the gurney. She still tried.

They don’t tell you to get ready for the sight and sound of your terminally ill significant other telling you she wishes you’d just fuck off. Or worse.

Don’t tell you to prepare for for the way it makes you feel to hear them beg for you to reach over and squeeze that tube shut tight until they stop flailing. Until the electronic wail and warble of alarming machines cuts out at the same time their breathing does.

But then, they don’t tell you anything.

So I just wait, listening to the staccato gasp of the ventilator as it breathes for her.

Wait for her body – wait for her – to give up and the truth that makes me sick to my stomach, worse than any amount of lukewarm vending machine-finest instant coffee can manage, is that I wish she would. Put us both out of this miserable half-existence. The worst thing isn’t watching her die …

… It’s wishing she would.


4
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement XXV – Fairytale of Bedford, New York

[The Present – Bedford Hills Prison, New York, USA]


Twisted spirals of orange-topped razor wire shift on the wind, bobbing between rusting fence posts and breaking up the silhouette of red brick walls. High above the short-shorn grass strips that leave nowhere to hide between buildings and the sharp perimeter, a boxy, wax-grey belfry threatens to merge with the storm-tossed sky above and behind. Figures clutching rifles step onto and off of gantries spanning the hundreds of feet between much newer towers. Their squat, concrete forms incongruous and brutal against the pioneer-esque, parochial architecture behind fluttering razor wire.

Fat beams of light sweep across from one tower towards the next, picking out recesses where clumps of broken masonry and above-ground pipework might give someone desperate the illusion of a safe place to hide – but there is no escape. Not from a place like this.

Control is baked into the very essence of Bedford Hills. Compliance, willing or otherwise encoded into each facet and component. It has a purpose so very close to my heart, such as it struggles these days, and its reason to be resonates as surely as if it shared my thoughts, too.

Education. Or … More specifically, re-education. Here is a place conceived from its very notion to design, construction and relentless endurance, to teach. To provide lessons. To enable learning. That the lessons it teaches are so painful is unfortunate but then, of course, it is home to a student body of such difficult pupils.

The rear wing of the car sinks down almost imperceptibly under my slight weight as I sag against the bodywork. A chain link fence surrounding the visitors’ car park which adds a further layer of protection between the single-track, asphalt road leading back towards the main highway and the larger prison complex shakes and clangs in the breeze. That same wind whirls underneath the raised bumper, making the thick lip of distended rubber from a flat tyre flap a few inches above pebble-strewn ground. The deliberate, serrated tear lies behind the rim and hidden from view.

And so here I sit, with the fabric of my seasonally-inappropriate summer dress billowing a thin, almost-gossamer layer of bright red across contrasting patches of dark, dried oil and tufts of brown grass. The cold evening turns frigid as the feeble, orange sun sinks below a backdrop of gently rolling hills. From somewhere behind me, the screech of a motor climbs high before the rattle of the internal gate it drives open drowns it out.

Headlights flicker on, making the metal of the exterior gate ahead turn dirty white and off-silver. The car draws level and the window of the front passenger side drops only the barest of an inch to let the voice inside carry through.

“Is there a problem, Ma’am?”

I leap down to land on my high-heeled feet and the force makes the whole car sway on a single, feeble jack holding its enormous weight up and clear. Nudging the wheel with the point of my mud-smeared shoe, I nod. “Flat tyre.”

His eyes move down my body, but there is no hint of lewdness. His face is relatively impassive and instead, he assesses me; evaluates a potential threat. “Visiting an inmate?”

Cocking my head to the side, I frown and look towards the red brickwork buildings behind another wire-topped fence line. “I was, but she was released before I could …”

“Wrong date,” I clarify, and that seems to assuage him ever so slightly in the way his muscled shoulders relax. From out of my sightline, his right hand returns to the steering wheel to join the other. From behind my back, I let the stump of what is left of my forearm swing into view. The titanium post cemented into shattered bone catches the setting sun.

“Can put a call into the guardhouse,” He offers. “Get a tow-truck out to help.”

I nod, and he reaches down to put his car into reverse. “Who’d you say you were here to see, anyway?” He asks, craning his head to look back over a shoulder.

“Avalon Blackthorn.”

His head whips around, steely eyes narrowed. For a few moments he just looks at me, jaw set and fingers tight around the wheel. He reaches down, pushing the gearstick forward and into drive. For a few moments it looks as if he will simply pull away – acting on his time-served and experience-honed instincts to step over a bear trap rather than linger with a foot hovering between the iron halves … But he does not. He cannot; not after hearing her name.

The window drops down all the way and he takes a harder look my way. “Get in.”

And I do.

It is ten miles of cold, early evening interspersed with truck stops and roadkill before he breaks the silence. “It’s been years.”

I nod, and he continues. “ … Haven’t seen her since she walked out of Bedford Hills determined not to end up coming back. Suppose that’s a good sign, but then … It’s a big State. Bigger country. Plenty of other correctional facilities to end up in.”

He glances over, but there is no real sign of fear. Trepidation, perhaps – but that is hardly surprising. He is unsure, but he is not afraid. At least, not yet.

“You were waiting for me,” He says. Not a question but a declarative statement and again, I nod. “Assume you know I’m not in the business of aiding, abetting or surrendering sensitive information. They paid their debt to society as far as I’m concerned. Not going to help you chase them down for something they did before that debt was paid.”

“I already know almost everything about Miss Blackthorn that I need to know, Mister Waterson.”

Something that might have been a laugh, dried out by the long-set sun is my first reply. “How’d you know who I am?”

A blood-spattered boulder flashes past and disappears into the rear-view mirror. “Public records.”

He shakes his head. “Nothing public about that.”

The road widens until it leaves rugged grassland and rural America behind and arrives at something more suburban. Clusters of brightly-coloured houses branch off in neatly-maintained estates lined with cast-iron streetlights and green, grassy verges. Each home is virtually indistinguishable from its neighbour, except for the make and model of the cars parked in front of wide, doubleset garages. Instantly forgettable.

We stop in front of a dark house between two others that blaze with light and life. Its windows are opaque, only the barest outline of furniture visible beyond. Nothing stirs. “I did not expect you to come home.”

“Guessing whatever you want to know is best kept quiet,” Waterson shrugs as he pushes the car door open. “Family’s due back in an hour – I want you gone by then.”

And I will.

[The Rapture]
 

It is so very good to see you again, Miss Wolfe, although I must confess I did not think it would be quite so soon. Indeed, it seems insufficient to have allowed your bruises to fade to sickly purple-green and the ache in your jaw when you bite down to become a lingering stiffness. Do you remember all those discrete, wonderful lessons I took such careful time to teach you? The choice agonies and miseries that we exchanged only a few short weeks ago? Those are yours to take with you now, and forever.

But, of course, we cannot look back to the past because we are not going that way. Instead, this Sunday, you will once again look up at me underneath those bright spotlights and this time, you will not labour under the misapprehension that I am anything cloaked in shadow or smoke. Despite the tired cliches and wearisome hyperbole, you will know precisely what waits for you at Climax Control.

Unfortunately this does somewhat rob you of the opportunity for ignorance and with it, a charmed bliss. Such a privilege was yours only once, weeks ago, and now you must repeat all of this, again, under no uncertain terms as to the price to be paid for experiencing it.

My time is so short that perhaps I would not have wished to spend what little of it is left to spare on the pleasure of your company, and that of your partner Miss Angelos. That is not because I do not think you are worth such a detour – did I not give you my full attention previously? Was the prize of the World Bombshells’ Championship insufficiently alluring and enticing? No. Our previous engagement took my rapt focus, and in that exchange I risked everything.

It cannot be said, even through the twisted words on the forked tongues of my detractors, that I looked beyond you. To something bigger and perceived as a greater existential threat.

To My Resplendent Hurricane. To Amber Ryan.

You must be so tired; so filled with a weariness that saps the strength from your muscles and makes each step heavy. To be set up with the expectation to climb mountains and defeat them in contests of stamina and willpower every week – to fight superheroes, distorted angels and faceless monsters. Lesser women might capitulate, or desperately find some reason to be anywhere else but the assigned location and time of their doom.

And yet, you do not. You endure. It is a worthy quality.

Equally unfortunately, this is not your time. Coincidence, corporate greed or that most satisfying of human desires, revenge, have placed you and Miss Angelos in a position that cannot serve to offer either of you anything except pain. Through that, there will always be growth but beyond that, I can reluctantly offer you nothing because those high stakes have become all the more pressing.

I will not look past you, again, but I will look through you. There is no alternative given the impossible, ever-switching dynamic that constantly gives and takes of my purpose and reason to be. Am I the Huntress; Champion; Predator? Or is it Miss Ryan who stalks me in the dark and the night? To be truthful, I am beginning to forget who plays which role …

So perhaps it is no surprise that in this building pressure, that threatens to grind teeth together and rupture ears, I have turned to someone who cannot be preoccupied with what came before. Someone unwilling to spend the second half of their life looking back at the first and despairing. The impetuousness of youth and newness and a refusal to embrace the status quo is a wonderful tonic to the ailments of bitterness and cynicism.

I have found a natural antidote to the destructive effects of a hurricane. A new way to still its ill wind.

Miss Blackthorn does not care who you are, because she is unmoved by stories of what you have done that do not involve her. Your greatest victories and achievements were not at her expense, so why should she deign to acknowledge them? They are nothing more than books to be read in moments of boredom, when life is not quite ready to be lived – in the wee small hours and the inch-thick rubberised mattresses of  poured concrete prison cells. When the world stops turning for long enough to look at what you have become and wonder why and how this could ever have come to be.

I will give you a little more attention, Krystal … But Avalon will give you none. Her lessons are not designed to improve, but to punish. In many ways, she is a far harsher teacher than me but then again, what is youth if not lacking in the desire to do, review and then apply. I think you will enjoy a very different relationship with her.

Quickly now, there is not much more time for us, together. Frost will soon blanket the ground and freeze the bare trees in their winter silhouettes. Strange things in dark forests stalk, whispering and howling at a bright moon which illuminates nothing. I would dearly love to show you the way home but I cannot go back. There is not enough time left for me to change direction, or walk a new path. I am committed to this. I cannot wait any longer.

I think it is going to snow, Krystal. Do not get caught outside, alone, after dark.


[The Present – Bedford Hills Prison, New York, USA]


I am not sure for how long I lay on the floor, but the snow had grown to make a blanket around the window ledge outside by the time Miss Blackthorn kneels down beside me. She extends a hand out but it hovers in midair – unsure what to do beyond the gesture. From where I have watched the flurry I turn my head and she finds my gaze.

She does not flinch at the movement. She does not move at all.

“Green plastic bottle,” I say. “Second bedroom on the first floor. Turn left at the grandfather clock.”

She opens her mouth to say something, likely relating to the clock or the number of bathrooms but stays silent and settles on a furrowed brow. She rocks backwards and stands and I go back to watching the snowfall.

When she returns it is to slump against the wall and slide down to sit to my right. Twisting the cap off, she taps a half-dozen small blue pills onto my proffered palm and follows my view out to the new winter night. In her other hand, she holds my prosthetic and setting the pill bottle down on the carpet, begins to tap her fingertips against the plastic phalanges in her grip.

“Thought it’d be heavier,” She shrugs, listening to the unpowered servo motors whine with each movement.

Swallowing the tablets, I let my eyes roll closed. “Mass is only one consideration. The other is the acceleration applied to that mass.”

She nods at that. “Hit hard – I get it.”

I can remember just how hard she hits, and she does. I dip my head. “Guess I shouldn’t bother asking where you were?”

“Why not?”

Her frown returns and cuts the skin of her forehead deeper. “Why not what?”

I sit up, pressing the only fingers left to me up against the exposed skin of my cheek, forehead and jaw. The skin is flushed red and hot to the touch. “Why should you not ask? I have nothing to hide.”


Avalon thinks on this for a few moments, slapping her palm against its composite counterpart. “… Where were you?”

“I met with your former prison guard, Christopher Waterson.”

Something that is difficult to identify with absolute certainty flashes across her features. At first it seems a rudimentary mixture of anger and shame, but there is something else intermixed which makes those feelings less divisible. She focuses on the snow. “Why?”

That is so very simple to answer. “I wanted to see if he was a good person.”

Methodically, MIss Blackthorn closes each of the plastic fingers on my prosthetic until it makes a fist. She turns it upside down and thumps it against the soft carpet below. After a few moments, she rests her chin against its upturned knuckles and glances at me.

“ … Why?”

“I wanted to see if you have become the person you are, now, because of or in spite of those who did what they could to help.”

Her lips part, but she hesitates and instead focuses her attention back on the window. A rhythmic thump, thump, thump continues until eventually, she sighs. “I don’t get it. You could have asked me.”

The all-consuming pain that had left me to watch the snow fall has waned a little, and with significant effort I draw my legs in underneath and manage to climb up to my knees. Avalon does not look around. “I told you how I ended up there.”

“You did,” I agree. Because she did. “However, I wanted to satisfy myself practically that what you said matched with who you are.”

She turns and climbs up to her feet. “Getting sick of hearing half-stories and parables and fables and lies–”

My interruption is sharp and cuts through her stream-of-consciousness. “I have never lied to you,” and the truth of my statement makes her pause. “You told me why you went to prison. You told me that you were punished not for starting trouble, but ending it and that your real error of judgement was confusing usefulness for love. Convenience for belonging. That you have been used as a tool more often than you have been appreciated as a person. Such a past is an infected wound that poisons the future from the ills of the past.”

I pull myself up to standing. “That is like someone else we are both intimately familiar with.”

“I’m nothing like her!” She barks, gesticulating with my own hand in a way that would seem utterly absurd if it were not for the cold-pressed fury radiating from her narrowed eyes.

I nod, and in a singular moment, the anger drains away from her features. “No – you are not. Because you have not turned your back on others who see the real you, even after you have been hurt so deeply by those who pretended. You are nothing like Miss Ryan.”

Sucking in a deep lungful of air, Avalon closes the distance and sets my prosthetic down next to the mask still lying on the tabletop. “So … What about Krystal and Ariana?”

Strength returns and my stomach untwists. Picking up the plastic hand, I set it down on the stump of my forearm and twist it into position. The fingers curl in serpentine sympathy. “We will give them an opportunity to experience something truly unique.”

She raises an eyebrow.

“A Rapture by Fire,” I nod and she laughs something short and sharp and grunted. I pick up the mask, turn it over and bring it up towards my bare face before pausing midway. Hesitating. I can feel Avalon watching me from the periphery of my vision. Setting it back down instead on the tabletop, I am only a few metres away when she calls out after:

“How is he?”

“Mister Waterson?” I ask, and she nods. “He is well, and he gives you his best.”

A small smile ghosts across Avalon’s features, but it does not survive my follow-up statement. “He remains available for anything you might need in the future, and implores you in the strongest possible terms to have nothing more to do with me.”


[The Rapture]
 

Miss Angelos …

… Do not be afraid of what is waiting. I do not want you to think of what is going to happen to you on Sunday, at Climax Control, in such purely personal terms as that. The miseries and agonies we will enjoy exchanging with each other are to be celebrated, not feared or shied away from. The things I have promised to take the time to do to you are not driven by some selfish desire to hurt wildly, without thought or feeling. Instead, it is better to think of them as the output of a system. A phenomena of interactions. Incapable of spite or malice.

Just like the hurricane you experienced only a short while ago.

It is perhaps difficult to see now, but you will be in such a privileged position come the beginning of next week. What other members of this company can say that they have faced down an Irresistible Object and an Immovable Force and survived to tell their exciting stories around catering? Presumably, you will survive me as you did Amber and can then lay claim to having endured a Hurricane and a Rapture and lived to tell.

But what will you tell them?

That you simply survived and took the wounds I promise to give you to remember me by and continued on – blindly, without growth. Without learning so much as a single one of the lessons both myself and Miss Blackthorn intend for you?

Or will you seize such a special opportunity to reinvent yourself? After all, you will emerge from a crucible of agony that will reforge and remake you anew. Consider the strength required to face one of the greatest World Bombshells’ Champions of all time, and then consecutively the current incumbent? To have done so and to do so, speaks volumes so much louder and more impressive than any mere gossip and speculation could achieve.

Oh, the heights you could yet hit if you accept the depths that you are about to strike.

It will make, of course, no immediate difference. You are an unexpected, transient happening in a chain of events written by grand design, fate, happenstance or some vengeful, cruel trick of an equally capricious god. There is no way you can make a meaningful impact here, now, and that is not your purpose or reason to be.

To be remade and reforged, you must be broken and that is the sacred duty I will undertake on Sunday. Miss Wolfe has already had her opportunity to take from me the Heart of a Hurricane and make it her own; to become the World Champion … But what of you?

What will you tell them?

Perhaps it is your time for boldness, for new beginnings. There is no reward for simply existing, and the First Law of Thermodynamics offers no boon for conservation of energy; it simply is. Instead of fearing the suffering you are about to experience as I have no doubt you are, instead turn it into an opportunity for new growth and new, wondrous things.

We have so much to show you.

There is one more thing I would like you to do for me – something only you can achieve on my behalf. In only a few days I will have held this heart of hers, reigned as Bombshells’ Champion, for a hundred days. In that time, only four people have taken up an opportunity to take it from me while so many others have talked exceedingly good games and delivered impressively poor performances. After Climax Control, you can act as independent verification; as proof that I prefer to show rather than tell.

Please, remember all of the lessons I teach you and the choice wounds I gift that you will carry for such a long time. Take them with you. Forge an ever-closer relationship with Krystal, made in the heat of group suffering at my thorn-painted hand and Miss Blackthorn’s conventional, if effective, fist. Be my evidence of my grand design, and go forth to show others of the beautiful things I have done to them and to you.

There is so little time left. I am sorry that you will not be given the opportunity to enjoy my personal attention, as Miss Wolfe did.

Perhaps it is best if you remain focused on the present, Ariana, for the here and now is all that remains relatively untarnished. Your past belongs to a Painted Hurricane and her cruel winds have bitten deep into your cold skin and turned it dark hues of blue. Your future is mine, co-opted and shared out with Avalon so that we might remake it into something that better serves our purpose. Your potential energy is repurposed; added to our own so that we might move even faster and with greater vigour to realise that grand design.

At Climax Control, I wish for you and Krystal to take careful heed of each of our lessons. Listen intently, show us your investment and passion and in exchange we will treat you to our most intimate miseries. Be with us and together, we will give you a new platform to rebuild whatever is left thereafter into something stronger, and greater. Think of all that you could be, if all that it takes is to be utterly destroyed first.

Would it not be wonderful to be liberated from such petty concerns? To be given the gift of strength of will and character? I have so little time left, and you and Krystal were a most unexpected event and still … I find myself minded to pause a moment. To find, somehow, some few moments to give you the focus you deserve. To step in front of something crashing and energetic and mighty, and bid it to stop a while so you can bathe in its coruscating power is so very brave of both of you.

Naive, perhaps. Foolish? Almost certainly and you will pay a heavy price in the injuries of the body, mind and soul you both carry henceforth for doing so but these are all in themselves gifts, to be carefully employed when your renaissance comes again. When you rise, blinking, into a warm morning sun and shake off the frost and chill of a long, cold Rapture.

Please, do not think of this as your end, Miss Angelos …

… Do not be afraid.

Welcome to the Rapture.


5
Character Building Roleplays / A Sunny Afternoon, with tea for Two
« on: December 03, 2022, 03:06:16 PM »
A Sunny Afternoon, with tea for Two.

The breeze rustles rose bushes topped with bright pink blooms; petals curling as their heavy heads sway on angled, thorny stalks. Birds flit between them, setting entire rows bowing in motion with a sinusoidal wave.

Sat at one of two iron-wrought chairs painted brilliant, glacial white, interspersed by a spiral-framed table topped by silver serving plates and delectables, the lithe form of SCW’s World Bombshells’ Champion extends out a prosthetic hand and lifts a scalding, bare-metal teapot into the air.

That same breeze rustles the fabric of her bright yellow sundress, making it billow and twist. She purses her lips, visible via the cutout of the red-dipped mask strapped to her face. The ceramic composite skirts a wide detour around the top of her mouth and chin, leaving pale skin exposed.

“Good Afternoon, Doctor Baal.”

Gabriel approached with due care and attention - he dare not rush and seem too keen, nor did he wish to linger and appear unsure. The speed with which he approached was of utmost importance. This was, after all, a game of chess, without a board.

“Good afternoon, Doctor DeLune.” He said with a nod and a smile as he reached the table. “Thank you so much for having me.”

Bright blue eyes tip up to regard her guest, teapot still held aloft. Thick ribbons of steam, from heated plastic fashioned into facsimiles of fingers, waft up into the warm air.

She returned his smile, gesturing with her only flesh-and-blood hand, palm upward towards the chair opposite. “Thank you for finding time to accept. We are all so busy, nowadays. It is important not to spend all of it such that you forget that life exists to live. Would you not agree?”

“Quite.” said Gabriel as he unfastened the jacket of his dark grey suit. He pulled back the chair and sat down, his eyes watching the tendrils of vapor wasting into the air. He adjusted his position, before continuing. “Especially since I'm about to become a father for the first time. I do that a lot, these days. It’s like my goal is to tell people that particular fact as appually as humanly possible. ‘Hello, my name is Gabriel Baal and I'm about to become a father’. As a psychiatrist, I could read an awful lot into that. But one tends not to dwell on the mysteries of one's own psyche. Especially with so much life to live.”

He smiled on the final words, a hint of mimicry. He glanced at the setting on the table, taking in the effort and attention to detail, before lifting his eyes to look upon his host.

“The complexities of the mind were too much for me,” Masque says after a while, letting the spout of the teapot dip to begin to fill the cup in front of Gabriel. “I found the simplicity of the body much more understandable. The heart, specifically …”

She set the pot down and pushed a small decanter forward. “ … Cardiology, specifically. Milk?”

“No, thank you.” Gabriel said with a smile.

Her gaze wanders down towards the rose bushes lining either side. “I shall miss these,” Masque adds, gently cupping a nearby flowerhead with a hard, plastic hand. “This is a peaceful place. Does this say something for my desire to be secluded? By being contemplative, is this evidence of my longing for solitude and a lasting peace?”

She stirs the cup in front of her. “In your professional opinion, of course.”

“Perhaps.” Said Gabriel, musing. “Or perhaps what you yearn for is a self-imposed exile. Subconsciously you may be wishing to, as those with religious faith would put it, pay for your sins. The truth is likely something altogether different. That's the nature of my profession - so often patients look to me to set them on a particular path. The right path. They aren't looking to be fixed, so much as they're looking for someone to fix their life and tell them which road to follow. That way, should that path be wrong, they have someone else to blame but themselves. They wish for me to absolve them of whatever guilt they have for the choices they've made.”

Gabriel lifted the tea to his lips and took a sip.

“Wonderful.” he said quietly, before placing it back upon its saucer. “I suspect you're an exception that proves the rule. I don't imagine you wish for me to absolve you of anything - and if I were to play my part, I would be surprised if it was guilt that you were looking to assuage.”

“Guilt is a reflex made from one’s ingrained moral system,” She replied. “Or, perhaps, Society’s. Your reputation is well-deserved, because you are correct. I have no guilt to cool or damp down; that would imply that I am anywhere other than where I should be. None of the choices I have made could have been made any other way. There is no road to walk down, with junctions offering hypotheticals and could-have-beens. The path is not laid out for us, but the journey is always the same. The destination is fixed.”

She lifts her own cup up, and sips. “This will all end in tragedy, of course. But the certainty is comforting.”

The breeze grows in strength, whipping at the folds of her sundress such that the apex of a line of scar tissue reveals itself. It runs from just below the nape of her neck to disappear in a line so true, it bisects her upper body neatly into symmetrical halves.

“The physical reality was disproved centuries ago, but tell me, Doctor Baal – why do you think we put so much stock into the heart and its role in our emotional wellbeing?”

“Life.” Said Gabriel simply, taking another sip from his tea. “The concept of the soul is one that many find comforting, whether it be spiritually or religiously. The idea of who we are manifesting itself in the tangible rather than the unanswered question. Science has taught us the why of who we are, but not the what. The brain, the logic centre. The heart for emotion. I believe humanity separated the two because the idea that the computer which powers our logical thought could also produce emotion is too limiting for most.”

Gabriel pondered the question further as he looked out across the magnificent vista. It reminded him of his own rose bushes back in Scarsdale. It reminded him of the solitude of their home in the Maldives.

“Physiologically, our bodies have fooled us too. When we feel joy, happiness, love - those feelings aren’t in our mind. They’re from our core. We feel warm, a quickened pulse, something akin to a glow. But the truth of the matter is that those feelings are merely representations of the change in the functions of our bodies. Joy, happiness, love - they raise our temperature. They increase the rate of our heart. We feel that flush, and those flutterings and mistake them for something more than functions. We ignore the fact that those same sensations come from danger as well. Adrenaline has a lot to answer for. Every single physical reaction to emotion is felt in the centre of our bodies. Nearest the heart. It is nature’s greatest trick.” Said Gabriel as he cast a look at the scar recently revealed. “It's the greatest lie.”

He paused for a moment, taking another drink from his cup. He allowed himself a slight smirk.

Lips pursed as he talks, Masque finds herself nodding. “Emotions are simply chemical reactions occurring at the cellular level. It is our consciousness, our sentience – and the subjective reasoning therein we apply in our analysis of those chemical reactions – that lend them meaning. Even the most wonderful, the most intense of those feelings are the interaction of various neuropeptides and enzymes. Nothing more.”

She shifts in her seat, crossing one long leg over the other. “It is fascinating that we ourselves are moved to make decisions, take actions, on the prompting of or in reaction to these make-believe, so-called feelings; giving them justification to exist instead of simply existing without explanation. A positive feedback loop of cognitive reinforcement …”

“But I defer to your field of expertise,” She adds with another smile.

“Is this why you invited me, Doctor?” He asked carefully. “To muse about the complexities of the human condition? Or is there some… Other reason for this pleasant meeting?”

The tall woman offers a slight shrug. “I enjoy our musings – so few nowadays seem to be interested in talking about why, instead of when or how. In terms of our meeting? It was necessary to allow me to amend my mathematical proof.”

The plastic fingers of her prosthetic uncurled as she took another sip, lingering over the cup to let the soft curl of steam billow up against the exposed skin of her chin.

“I have spent so very long cultivating an equation to define a hurricane. Its strength, direction … All coefficients and values painstakingly categorised and understood to understand and ultimately control, to some extent, its behaviour. Its moods. Better to be able to control such a phenomenon or more usefully, dispel it.”

She cocks her head to the side. “Now, I am drinking tea with a new variable I had not encountered before. One which upsets that equation. I cannot modify my theorem until I understand how this new input will affect the overall system. I must understand why you are involved here, now, Doctor, before I can evaluate how much of an interference this presents to my objective. Like understanding a potential new vector for a virus, so that my treatment plan might be made more effective in the wake of its evolution.”

“Ahhhhh of course.” Said Gabriel with the merest hint of a chuckle. “The unknown entity. You wonder, I assume, how my unexpected and - I suspect in your opinion - unwarranted appearance in this particular equation come to pass?

Gabriel didn't wait for the answer to come.

“It is interesting, I'll admit. Those who know me best would tell you that I am never without purpose. Measured in all things, no matter how much anarchy there appears to be. Rogan would likely suggest that my goal is knowledge. Ichabod would muse that I am in search of power. Eden, well, she would no doubt assume I'm missing the opportunity to play puppet master.”

“And which is it?”  She asks.

“All of them. None of them. I'm not entirely sure myself. All that is certain is that nothing is certain. The “what” here is chaos - and I have no way of knowing in which direction that particular wind will blow.” Gabriel said calmly placing one hand atop the other on his lap. “And the why? Well… That is every bit as complicated as those emotions we spoke of earlier.”

Masque glances up towards the wisp of cloud drifting across a blanket-blue sky. “How wonderfully vague. Unexpected? Yes. Unlike so many others around me, I am neither clairvoyant or prescient and I cannot predict the future, despite the obvious utility of such an ability. Unwarranted?”

“I am very used to interference,” She continued. “You would be surprised to know how many faces I have never seen interject in my affairs; to perturb my aims or, very occasionally, co-opt them.”

Absent-mindedly, Masque scratches underneath the soft rubber ring which sits between the base of her prosthetic hand and the truncated stump it bolts to. “I was visited by a Songbird, once, who tried to make me an extension of his will, because he thought all of this was a game.”

Another smile. “He found out, too late, that this is not a game. This is very, very real. I suspect you would not be quite so brazen …”

Gabriel’s lip curled.

“I’ve been called bold, but rarely brazen.” He said as he lifted his tea and drained the remainder from the cup. “The truth of the matter is that I have noticed you, much like I have noticed your hurricane. Both of you intrigue me, and intrigue is so often key to my relationships. I was intrigued by Ichabod and he became as close as a brother, but also a fierce adversary. I was intrigued by Rogan MacLean and he remains one of my most trusted friends, but was once a man with whom I shared abject disdain. I was intrigued by Eden Morgan. She and I once planned to destroy one another - now she is my wife and carries my child.”

Gabriel sat back after placing the cup back into its saucer.

“Eden has always mused that I like to keep those that can cause me most damage the closest. The question I am yet to answer, Doctor DeLune, is as to whether I should keep you or the Hurricane nearest to me.” He added as he picked a thread of cotton from the leg of his trousers. “But I look forward to finding out.”

She pushed the chair back, metal legs scraping against terracotta-shaded tiles as she stood. Stooping over at the waist, she tipped a cluster of roses up to meet her dipping chin and took a deep, sweet lungful of air – letting it run free to join the light breeze swirling around.

“I wonder, Doctor Baal, if you are not a catalyst? It sounds like you describe one with your previous interactions. A substance that accelerates a reaction which would otherwise progress much too slowly to be useful, but somehow avoids being used up in the process. Something untaintable, or at least … Not by its surrounding reactants.”

“Perhaps.” He said quietly, musing upon her analysis. “Though, I would suggest that given my immediate proximity to those whose lives I touch, I am incapable of remaining untouched. Eden is my wife. Ichabod something of a mentor. Rogan, my closest friend. I would argue that I am… Inescapably linked to those I often seek to destroy.”

He smiled.

“Often it is my best intentions that are the most damaging.” he added, looking away from her.

She cocks her head to the side, towards Gabriel and closes the distance until she circles back behind. Carefully, she plucks a single flower petal otherwise stuck to the fine fabric of his jacket via static with her all-too-human hand. She lets it flutter down to the tabletop.

“Unfortunately, I do not have much dexterity in my prosthetic,” She begins as the plastic fingers jerk open, almost spurred by the inference. “It seems to be capable of applying only the strongest, most crushing pressure. So I must temper it, leave myself at a disadvantage if finesse is required …”

Looking up at the sky, Masque comes back around to tableside. “If longevity factors into your choice as to who to keep close, I would suggest your decision lies with a hurricane.”

“I will not be here for very much longer,” She adds, blue eyes finding Gabriel’s gaze. He lingers, surveying her carefully. He leans forward, elbows on the edge of the table and fingers clasped. Inelegant it may have been, it served it’s purpose to bring them closer.

“Sometimes those that burn the brightest, burn out the fastest.” He said quietly. “I enjoy the abject destruction that this can bring with it. Your star is burning bright, Doctor DeLune. But then again… The most devastating Hurricanes can’t sustain their power forever. So the question is less about which will last the longest, and more about which greater power will keep my attention until their final moment.”

Gabriel tilted his head this time, his eyes focused on hers intently.

“I’ve heard rumors and stories, but I wish to know the truth from you… what is it about her?” He asked. “What is it you see?”

Perching on the edge of the table, she lets her bare feet swing freely. “So many things,” Masque begins, a smile again gracing her lips. “An opportunity for vengeance, against those who visited such cruelties on me. Such a powerful drug that we are all almost helpless to resist. Along the way, a chance to create something so incredibly powerful that none might stand in its wake – to unleash a living weapon free from the tiresome burden of morality, and ethical considerations. To strip away all the softness, eliminate those that would poison her with their warmth …”

The smile fades, something difficult to quantify ghosting across her visible features. “Love, I think.”

“I think I loved her, Doctor Baal,” She says with a nod, watching the swaying, bright-topped bushes. “I am not sure what love is, exactly – but I think I did.”

Masque looks over in his direction. “I think I am still in love with her. But then, so many are. The only difference between them, and me, is I have not lost focus. I have not folded to become just another sycophant or trusted lieutenant …”

Her blue eyes roll closed. “I have almost taken everything from her. Her title – the heart of a hurricane – and her health. I have taken years from her remaining career and have gifted her choice scars that will never heal. Almost everything. But not quite. She still holds on to her humanity. Her moral compass spins errantly, confused, but it is still attached. Still intact.”

“I believe Miss Ryan will end me,” She says with a nod. “But it will take everything she has and more. It will be a cost she can never repay. For all her champions and supporters, and there are so many for such a lone figure and independent power, it will be only myself. And her.”

“We are destined to do this forever … But perhaps forever is not such a long time.”

Gabriel mused for a moment. Chewing on his next words carefully - so often he was a man of prose and poise. Spending time to deliver monologues and fiendish word play. Today was no different. And yet…Now was the time to be succinct.

“Is your desire that Amber come for you?” He asked quietly. “For your story to end, however it is supposed to end?”

“Amber pursues me because she cannot accept having been made second-best,” Masque offered with another smile. “She has lost before; that is a matter of record. But she has never been defeated – comprehensively dismantled and left in pieces on a cold concrete floor … Until she crossed me. She has never known real loss, truthful, powerful, gut-churning emptiness, until she was bed-bound in a downtown Las Vegas hospital and sang into a medically-induced coma, by the soft electronic lullaby of the equipment clustered on trollies around her.”

She looks away, back up towards those blue skies and patchwork cloud. “Even now, she shouts my name in endless, thirsty calls for acknowledgement and opposition. Amber has returned knowing the only path to her salvation, up to and including her destruction, lies in overcoming everything I symbolise. But in her rush to make it to our anointed place of battle, my Resplendent Hurricane has not paused to ask the most important question of all …”

“What if I have outgrown her? What if I am no longer content to stand as an auxiliary? What if I do not want to be her resurrection? What if it is me who no longer needs her? My story will end all too soon … But perhaps I do not think she deserves to be the one to do it.”

“Abigayle,” She adds, almost as an afterthought. “My name is Abigayle.”

“Abigayle.” Gabriel parroted with a satisfied smile. “Well, Abigayle. I suspect I have power to guide whether or not Amber is able to return. I have no plans to forestall her reappearance. In fact, if asked, I will aid her in making her return.”

Gabriel watched Abigayle for a reaction, but none came. She was the picture of tranquil contemplation.

“I wish to see first hand just how destructive the two of you can be. Bear witness to the cataclysm. The unbridled and unyielding chaos that surrounds the both of you.” Said Gabriel calmly.

She doesn’t look away from looking up above. “Are you conducting an experiment, Doctor? A cold, calculating assessment of the damage caused by two hypergolic reactants that need no external stimuli to ignite when they come together? Will you dispassionately note the results and record them for mere scientific curiosity?”

“ … Or will you enjoy the spectacle?” Masque adds, reaching over for a cooling cup and bringing it up to her lips. “Is this less analytical, and more artful? A show to be enjoyed rather than a sterile evaluation?”

Taking a sip, she purses her lips. “There are so many people with so many games afoot. Sometimes I forget which ones I am taking part in – willingly or not so.”

Masque sets the cup down on the tabletop. “Perhaps the true difference between myself and Miss Ryan is for all her bitterness and cynicism, she still believes she is the architect of her own downfall; free to make and continue to make those bad decisions which have come to be her hallmark. I, on the other hand, understand that we are all marionettes, with the only question being how long the strings which make us dance extend upwards.”

“The question remains… Who holds the control bar?” Gabriel mused with a smile. “This has been both delightful and illuminating, Abigayle.”

He watched a prosthetic hand extend out and met it with one of his own, turning it over to look more closely at the composite phalange underneath his overlaid thumb. “Thank you for your time, Doctor DeLune.”

She smiled again and nodded as he stood. “It has been so wonderful to meet you, Doctor Baal.”

And at that moment, both of them absolutely and utterly spoke the purest truth.

6
Character Building Roleplays / Oblivion Welcomes Careful Drivers
« on: December 03, 2022, 02:56:09 PM »
Oblivion Welcome Careful Drivers


Oblivion Garage
Las Vegas, NV, USA
3 December, 2022, 8:25PM
Overcast 11c


The paintwork was polished up to a blinding sheen like staring into the face of the Sun itself, and he had to squint just to pick out the sweeping lines of chrome that drew the edge of a hood. Tugging up the mud-circled hem of his trousers, Fexxfield sank down to his haunches in front of a set of headlights almost as wide as his face. The overhead lights bounced against the glass and made his reflection refract into a half-dozen skewed dopplegangers.

He whistled long and low, pushing up the brim of his hat with a forefinger. She was all business with just the hint of pleasure – a broken leg at the end of a real good time, if you put the rightmost pedal down and got a little overconfident in the ability of the middle one to bail you out.

Sounded like someone else he knew. The gumshoe smirked, but the humour didn’t have the gas in the tank to finish the journey from his lips up to reach his eyes. Things rarely did, nowadays. Laughs came like a halfway house between the end of the road and the start of a highway to Hades, Hell … Some kind of underworld. They all did the same thing.

Treading as softly as he could for a man of his size, Mac Bane stood not far behind him. "That was a sad sounding laugh, Fexxfield." The big man gave him a concerned half smile of his own. "But with the shit you've been through, I can't say that I'd blame you."

Nodding, because truer words had probably never been spoken within the city limits of the City of Sin, Terryl pushed himself up to standing, turned and offered out a hand.

“Doesn’t seem real sometimes,” He began, rubbing the base of his free palm against an eye as if that could roll back the accumulated near-decade of bone-deep weariness. Fatigue that went all the way to the marrow, threatened to take his well-worn loafers out from underneath him. “Miseries just keep piling up on top of each other until the floor starts to creak with the weight of it all.”

He sighs, sweeping the hat off from his head and squeezing the threadbare rim.

“Not that either one of us could stop her,” Fexxfield admitted with a shrug, “ … But we really not going to try anyway? What if …”

He glanced over his shoulder, as if someone might start the engine behind and blind him in the glare of being caught in some heartbreaking admission courtesy of those big chrome-rimmed headlamps. “What if she can’t beat that Eldritch She-Witch, Mac? What if next time, Amber doesn’t get back up again?”

“Know we can’t do a thing,” He continued, exasperation ringing in every word. “But should we – do something, anyway? Masque …”

He paused, as if the name itself might invoke something other-wordly and awful. “ … Put me down for months and stopped my world turning for some six years. Fills me with dread to think what Amber might go through if she does this again.”

Mac shook his head in disbelief, “No, T, we cannot stand in her way. This isn’t simple revenge. It’s far more personal than that.” “One thing I’ve learned about her is that, if we even pretend to be against this, she’ll go dark and rogue. Not to mention, the influence of Gabrial Baal.” Mac began to pace, stopping several times to say something and then shaking it away. “No, we don’t interfere but that does not prevent us from running interference and being as supportive as we can be.” Now his face and voice full of conviction, Mac turns to the man, “That’s our play in this war, Terryl, it has to be, otherwise it ends badly for everyone.” Mac smiles, “So, we provide her the best strike team available, since we know how Masque likes to manipulate people. I saw that Knox was back, and that does not bode well for the odds against Amber.”

“The Songbird that flew south for the winter of discontent,” Fexxfield frowned, chewing on the inside of his cheek. That guy was a variable he hadn’t accounted for, because what rational-minded person could conjure up any real-world scenario in which someone voluntarily got on board with that She-Witch? Standing by while she almost killed Amber? That wasn’t the bit that stuck in his throat like it did for most other people. After all, hadn’t she done that to him all those years ago back in Atlantic City? No. People do stupid things when they’re caught between two irreconcilable positions …

But following her tune? Made no sense at all. The implications of that were all the more worrying.

Eventually, he nodded. “Think you’re right … But we reserve said right to start throwing down. This Baal guy, doctor, apparently. Not sure he’s so clear on the “Do No Harm” bit, but know you’re watching just as closely as I am.”

“Truth is Mac, I’m not sure Amber can beat her,” And he didn’t feel any more unburdened by the admission. “She’s got to try; can’t help but try … But I don’t know. Everyone else seems motivated by things recognisable as motivations: money, glory, power … Or just being straight-up mad. Masque though? Feels like it’s one of those things. Two – all of them, none of them … All at the same time. And now she’s roped in that young girl, Blackthorn …”

He sighed. “And as if it wasn’t somehow sticky like molasses enough, there’s a title involved. Anywhere else, between anyone else, I’d say that didn’t register so much as a tingle on a ten thousand amp shock, but this title … Amber’s title. Her heart …”

“Her words,” He laughed, bitter and sickly on his own heart. “True enough, though. That thing nearly killed her from the inside-out last time. That thing gave Masque her in, originally …”

Crumpling the fabric of the hat in his hands, Terryl blew his breath out between slack lips. “Feels like things are building to some terrible, awful release. One it feels like we won’t all survive in any shape that makes it feel worthwhile.”

A slow, sad smile formed on Mac's lips, and he nodded. "That's a fair assessment. No matter how you look at this, it's a no win situation for all involved. " He shook his head and laughed. "All is not lost though. As long as we agree now that nothing is off limits. I have not fought like that in ages but there's a reason the industry hated and feared me at one time. " A wistful smirk forms on his face, "I can be that guy once again. For her sake, I'm going to. Don't underestimate Amber. It's a long story but I dislocated both of her shoulders during a match once, she still beat me. "

“Never have,” Fexxfield replied with a sigh, dragging a gnarled hand down his features as if smoothing out the worry lines took them all away for a spell. “Saw her make some decisions I’m not sure Masque herself ever would; dark ones that made everything rainy and sad for a good few years thereafter …”

Shaking his head, the gumshoe forced his attention back to the matter at hand and away from the ghosts of the past – both dead as traditional and somehow, very much alive. “Met a lot of awful folk in my time. Bet we both have. Not many that keep me awake even at the end of an empty bottle and a good night making it that way. And now …”

The nine-ton elephant in the room threatening to sit on all their collective chests. “The title,” He clarified even though the comparison stayed strictly implicit. “She’s done some terrible things in the pursuit of that recognition. Is all this just so she can do that all again?”

“What if …” The words are dangerous, threatening them both before they’re even spoken aloud. “ … What if this is all part of the plan? She spent so long trying to turn Amber into some sort of amoral, living weapon by exploiting her need to be the standard, to force people to recognise and acknowledge through that title. So what if Masque taking it was just so she could make Amber lose everything to win it back?”

Fexxfield’s frown deepened until it threatened to cut into the bone of his skull. “Can understand a straight-up, knock-down fight between those two. But throw in something radioactive, a slow poison like that Championship and suddenly, things get a whole lot less clear-cut.”

He glanced back at Mac. “What if she’s sleepwalking back into a grave she just about died climbing out of?”

Mac released a heavy sigh, "she did die in that ambulance ride. I won't…..I can't let that happen again. That's why I feel the way I feel about this situation. It's why I'm willing to go to any lengths to put a stop to it. " He looked up at the recently rebuilt ceiling. "Something like this…" He pointed all around. "It's easy to rebuild, someone like her, that's a much grander project. It's one worth pursuing, when you love someone unconditionally. "
Love. That made him turn away. His lips parted, because there were words on his tongue ready to tumble free, but those had been for her, not the man stood opposite and not now. It was just too late. That ship had sailed, sprung a leak and exploded in a shower of razor-sharp iron and plastic as cold seawater flooded the boilers and blew everything up from within. It wouldn’t serve anyone – not Mac, not Amber and certainly not him to say it all now.

Felt like she knew anyway. Like the man next to him probably knew. So let everyone just marinate in the stink of stumbling over the truth and carrying on as if nothing had happened, because it was too hard to confront. Too painful.

Setting the hat back on his head and tugging the brim down, Terryl just nodded. “Whatever you need,” He said; even while the implications of his internal monologue made his heart twist and strain against prison bars fashioned from a ribcage, calcified by too many breaks. “Sounds like a project worth helping see through.”


7
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XXIV – Fairytale of Las Vegas

[The Present – Las Vegas, Nevada, USA]


A pencil-thin patchwork of frost spreads out along the face of the guttering, standing prouder where it rides over scabs of orange corrosion that lift and break apart faded green paint. Around the outlet it thickens to make a collar of ice; lumpen and shifting from crystal clarity to murky, milky-white opaqueness. It mixes with the effluent and run-off and freezes in a fat, grotesque tongue that spills out onto rutted asphalt.

Steam rises in thick gouts, billowing up from iron gratings sunk into concrete rings between the high-rises. They collect in on themselves rivulets of black and poisoned water, melted from clumps of ice that hang against guttering, fire escapes, corner buttresses and anything exposed to the chill night air. Shapes loiter in the stinking, man-made mist, becoming distinct as they step through and swing a fist.

The first blow cracks the composite over my face, but the mask holds its shape enough to turn a guaranteed haymaker into something more like a mere incredible pressure, brought to bear against my temple. Hard. Physics forces me to take a step back and in that moment, something heavy and rubberised lashes out against the inside of my knee. It folds, forcing me down to the soaking wet concrete. A hand – my only real one – thrown out to break my fall breaks at the wrist. That same boot, recognisable as it fills my vision, sweeps up and catches me flat on the bridge of where my nose would be; at least if it were exposed to the December evening watching this assault unfold with only the cool and full Moon for company.

I know there are only two of them, because one looms above – face all but hidden by the clouds of breath spilling from sneering lips – while another uses the flat of that trusty shoe to force me down onto my side. The fabric of my dress turns grey with black water, shiny under star and streetlight and clinging to my warm skin underneath. My forearm drags across the uneven ground, sharp spurs of hard stone cutting and cutting into soft flesh and making it bleed.

The broken halves of my mask swing on inertia, limply and courtesy of their fabric strapping around the back of my head, like the static and hanging jaws of a Basking Shark. I try to snare them with specific agony I prefer to focus on, roughly throwing the shattered pieces clear with the curled fingers of my prosthetic and leaving my face exposed to the cold for the first time.

Something warm trickles underneath my nostril and tickles. It tastes like iron.

“Huh …” One of them grunts, and between breaths I catch sight of his face. Stubbled, shaved smooth across a scarred scalp, on top of a thickset neck once powerful but turning to fat. “Thought it’d be all cut up or something …”

The owner of the steel-plated boots behind me is less interested. “Let’s hurry it up.”

“Why’s it covered?”

I sink further into the wet concrete, because it serves my purpose not to stir and invite an opportunity to stay down here for longer than is otherwise necessary. Longer than it takes for the pain in my side and inside my skull to subside. With practised, disciplined focus, I slow my otherwise ragged breathing and turn his curiosity into the weapon I will soon use to put him down here, where I am now.

“Kev–”

“Don’t use my real name, you fucking idiot!” The one up above interrupts, his introspection cut short by the slip. His upturned chin and scowl eventually filter back down towards me, once again the focus of his attention and I meet his gaze with mine.

“Huh …” He grunts, again, lacking anything more eloquent. “You’re pretty easy on the eyes. At least right now, before we get done with you. Expected it’d look like you took your car to the crusher and forgot to get out.”

Subtly I climb up onto the points of pained elbows, pulling my prosthetic in underneath my aching chest. He leans down, chipped teeth bared in a dirty, nicotine-stained sneer. “What? Can’t talk? No tongue behind those pearly whites? Is that it?”

A thick slab of a hand reaches out and takes a handful of my hair, roughly forcing my head up to compress the topmost vertebrae in my spine. The distance between us closes imperceptibly as he studies my face, looking for some evidence of why he’s been asked to come here and do this.

He frowns, spreading a tuft of my hair with his spare fingers to reveal the curve of a gnarled scar. “Get dropped on your head as a–”

His last words are swallowed up by his jaw forced shut and broken under the force of my plastic fist, driven up in an irresistible arc. Teeth splinter and skin splits and red splashes across composite phalanges.

Rolling onto my back, I throw my leg in a circle that meets and then sweeps his partner off his feet even as he steps forward, instinctually. Inertia brings my thigh around and letting it pass under my opposite ankle gives me the momentum to push up to standing in a single, fluid movement. Trying to minimise the scope of the inevitable, expensive dental implants required by holding the remains of his mouth in place with a slick palm, the thug ahead lashes out but his other balled fist sails easily over the space previously occupied by my face. A face now significantly easier on the eye than his.

As a matter of convenience over grace, I turn on the spot and drive the flat of my boot against the skull of the one trying to scramble up from the rutted floor. Something breaks with a wet whip crack and he slumps and never gets back up.

Stepping forward, I gently cradle a gushing face in between my hands and drive up my knee to break the nose above a broken mouth. Something trapped halfway between a scream and a whimper tumbles out between slack lips, jagged pieces of dentin and enamel tinkling against the pools of black water below and making them ripple and shiver.

“Cannot talk?” I ask, methodically taking one step for every one he does backwards, until a brick wall bisected with thick power cables and washed grey by storm run-off makes it impossible to go any further.

There is a particular limit to the force one can apply in their grip as a function of pressure over area, and this is dictated by the strength of the musculature and tendons of the hand. Where the muscles are replaced by miniaturised servomotors, and the tendons by titanium alloy rods, the limit is an order of magnitude greater and as the composite fingers of my prosthetic close around his neck, bubbles froth in blood squeezed clear from a shattered mouth.

“Who?”

He struggles but metal beats meat and the pressure crushing his throat is agonising and irresistible. “ … I … Please …”

But my supply of mercy is exhausted, tonight. And so I squeeze.

“ … Field …” He rasps, the syllables dry vowels scraping against swelling gums. I release my grip incrementally; only sufficiently to unstick his fat tongue from the roof of his mouth but not so much as to give him the euphoric high of emptying his trembling lungs of their poisoned chestful of carbon dioxide.

“Fexxfield …”

I let him struggle on the tightrope between conscious thought and oblivion for a little longer, because I am angry. Not at the identity of their mysterious silent partner or client – that much was obvious, all along. Nor at them, because they are employing what little aptitude they possess in the field most suited to their mediocre talents.

No, I am angry at myself. For being distracted by something I perceived to be of greater consideration. To have been so focused on the horizon that I did not pay sufficient attention to the path immediately in front of me. To have obsessed over the future to such a degree that all thoughts of the present were consigned to the past.

The plastic fingers of my prosthetic leave deep pink impressions of their shape in the trembling putty-like skin of his neck, as he slumps down to the frosted ground with a soft thud. His partner has yet to stir from the place where he unknowingly nurses a fractured skull.

Turning back towards the streetlights lining the way ahead, I scoop up the shattered pieces of the mask broken free of my face and turn the parts over in a palm.

Up above, the rain turns to snow. It is time to pay a visit to a threat closer to home.


[The Rapture]


Despite having made somewhat of a lynchpin of a career in denigrating those who arrive at opportunities by any other means but honest and earned, it seems my Resplendent Hurricane has done precisely that in somehow obtaining a match against me at High Stakes. For the Bombshells’ World Championship, no less.

It has been seven long years since our paths first crossed, since she made a choice that at the time had appeared cold, cool and calculating but with the benefit of hindsight, now seems a result only of her superficial lust for glory and kudos. Almost a decade in which she has turned indifference and apathy into an artform, while holding that most precious of works close to her chest in the form of a title she would have – and did – trade her heart for.

Oh, how we have worked a twisted path with each other. Together. How I enjoyed all of the things we accomplished, and when it came time for our partnership to end, how I was thrilled to be the one to put her in a hospital bed for six weeks and intense, agonising physical therapy for months more. These are memories I cherish and ones I cannot easily forget.

So imagine the tumultuous feeling churned up in the pit of my gut and the far reaches of my mind to know that so very soon, I will have the opportunity to do so again. It is an intense feeling, bordering on the intoxicating, to imagine a world in which Amber Ryan is knocked not only from the summit of the mountain she believes built by her callused hands, but also left in the deepest ravine to freeze to death in day-glow windbreakers and waterproof boots. To become a goretex tombstone to any and all who would venture past on their way to replicate her glories.

So imagine, then, how very easy it would be for me to look past you, Melissa, at such a tantalising opportunity to gift such wonderful violence. Consider for a moment, the potential pitfalls of paying such close attention to the blade plunging for my chest that I am instead nicked in the neck and left to bleed from artery or vein until I am on my knees, slipping in my own surprise and blindness.

Such an ignominious end, that is not in keeping with the beautiful story I am attempting to bring to a suitable, thrilling close.

It is important for you to understand that far from being an afterthought, Melissa, I consider you integral to everything that comes next. After all, there can be no greater opportunity for me to demonstrate my credentials, given they appear to be in near-universal doubt despite my accomplishments. All because a hurricane has chosen now to begin to turn again, and in response, we should lock ourselves in safe places and wait out a storm that has deigned to return and take what no longer belongs to them. What it has sacrificed the right to claim as their heart and soul.

Ahead of High Stakes, you are an opportunity to serve as a reminder. A warning. A stark reality for the delusion which is sweeping through this company, perhaps born from desperation as the division singularly runs out of heroes and instead turns to lambs and children to do what wolves and warriors could not.

You are so important to me.

Last week, Amber Ryan showed her disdain for Miss Angelos in every facet of their interaction. The dismissiveness and arrogance, unfounded and illegitimate considering the former only recently regained the ability to visit the toilet unaided and yet chose not to pursue the Roulette Championship because it did not concern her – as if any true predator could resist the iron-stink of red meat for the promise of something more discerning at some other time. Selective starvation is as absurd for so-called top-tier athletes as it is for apex predators.

I will not be so dismissive or disrespectful, because through you I have the chance to send such a powerful message. That despite the hyperbole and bluster, I am the most dominant force this company has seen regardless of gender or division. I am not a shadow waiting for the light of the sun in just the right position to be given purpose, and I am no placeholder for another record-breaking Amber Ryan run.

You are so special.

Together, we can trade such beautiful miseries with each other and such exquisite agonies that there will still be time for you to learn from the lessons I will inflict upon you and return wiser, more prepared. I do not consider this so trite and condescending as a warm-up bout for something greater. No … Through you, I will achieve something greater.

You will help me prove what has already been established beyond any reasonable doubt or argument. Empirically, we will demonstrate what is already whispered in hushed tones between catering tables and behind the locked doors of locker rooms in arenas throughout every city turned iron underbelly that hosts our carefully-orchestrated violence.

I am the heart of this company, and it turns like a stage set upon the world with me at its centre.


[The Present – Las Vegas, Nevada, USA]


“Took you longer than I thought it would,” He mutters, facing away from me and towards the expansive window caked in effluent, traffic smog, rain and birdshit. The cracked glass is all but opaque, with only the barest silhouette of the cityscape of Atlantic City distinguishable through smeared grey haze.

I step over the threshold of the open door that had once read FEXXFIELD INVESTIGATIONS, but now leant up against the wall; broken free of its hinges and bent in the middle. Bent by the sole of my boot all those months before, when I had disturbed the previous – illegal – tenants with my Resplendent Hurricane by my side. But those were different times.

Happier times.

“I hoped you would finally learn the lesson I have spent so much of my time trying to teach you,” I reply, and when he glances up to see the reflection of my bare face, sans mask in the mirror ahead, he immediately looks away. “ … But just like her, you are a difficult pupil.”

HIs voice sounds sluggish, no doubt made blurry by the half-empty glass squeezed between his fingers by its sticky neck. “Never thought we were much alike.”

“More than you know – but unfortunately there is no time left for you, or Miss Ryan, to find out how much.”

The floorboards creak under my heels, damp wood bowing with my weight. “I do not understand why you told them.”

The half-hidden reflection in the mirror shows something that might be a frown. He still does not look up.

“Your name,” I clarify. “Why did you tell them your name?”

Something that might have been a laugh, but dry and bitter and paper-thin is my only response for several long moments. When he eventually speaks, it is between long and desperate gulps from the almost-empty bottle in his hands. “Felt like I needed to be honest, if I was going to give you something I could never get back.”

The floorboards groan until I come to a stop directly behind him and I can feel his shoulders tense; back arch ramrod-straight. Closer to the shit-stained window his reflection is that much clearer and in it, I can see his nostrils flare as my perfume wafts past and replaces the smell of wet paper and wood rot with something floral and bright.

“What is it you think you have given me?”

“Self-respect,” He shrugs. “Moral compass. Integrity. Can’t think of a word that captures it all that accurately, but it doesn’t matter. You got it when I sent those ten-dollar chumps in the hopes they might just make you disappear.”

The shattered halves of my mask clatter against the floor in front of him as they spin free of my prosthetic. He jerks back and against me and the feel of my body sends his sense of balance out of kilter and out of tolerance. He overcorrects and falls forwards onto his hands and knees, bottle sent spinning away to slosh out the last of its gold-hued firewater and darken patches of rat droppings that make polka-dot patterns.

“Almost,” I admit, and that is more difficult to say aloud than I had anticipated. “I was somewhat distracted, with the news this will all soon come to an end. The stakes–”

“Couldn’t be higher,” He finishes quietly, forlornly. “Didn’t have your blue eyes on what was right in front of you. Almost tripped for your focus on where you were going and not what you were doing.”

I nod. “Precisely. Almost.”

The plastic forefinger of my prosthetic traces a pattern down his temple and cups the edge of his cheek. He flinches.

“Hope Melissa gives you hell,” Fexxfield mutters. Outside, the snow gentle snowfall becomes a flurry.

My prosthetic rounds to cup his chin, finally forcing his eyes to meet mine. “Oh, my darling,” I reply, my voice taking on the lilt and tone of a woman dead for almost ten years. A voice that makes the so-called gumshoe squeeze his eyes shut. “That will not help you now.”


[The Rapture]


I have sat in such dignified silence, for so long, but my patience wears thin enough to see my frustrations roiling underneath.

In almost a year, I have established credentials that usurped every pretender to equality of achievement; whether through volume of competition or quality in dispatching opposition regardless of their vaunted reputation or legacy. Records – such as they were – cast aside and reforged, remade in my image and left in my wake for others to regard with the tacit realisation they are incapable of matching, let alone exceeding them. All of this in silence, without endless, tedious self-adulation and congratulation.

They worshipped their own mediocrity, revelled in it, and I stayed silent.

For weeks becoming months, I was forced to listen to their averageness trumpeted as some incredible feat. The names blur into a spectrum of failure: Kaijus, Salcos, Bentons, Zdunich A, Zdunich B and every other permutation; Johnsons and Wolfes …

I listened to them champion their blinkered world views and list all the flawed reasons as to why they were untouchable, or at the very least, unafraid. Each and every one of them came to know the error of their ways, delivered by my thorn-painted hand. Each and every one personally reeducated as to the depths of their failure, and made to realise that relentless talk cannot overpower simple, clinical demonstration.

Practical defeats theory in every permutation.

Even as World Bombshells’ Champion, I am forced to listen to their inane, pratling, bleating threats made of cardboard and paper-thin with supporting hopes of making anything approaching a change to their circumstances. The only difference in months of toil is that such bleating rings out in corridors I do not walk down, or spaces I do not pass through, because the heart trimmed in gold plate and precious stones I carry is too bright to look at and question. Instead, they gather in the dark where that light does not shine and mewl for someone – anyone – to make it stop.

But there is not one of them capable of doing so, and that is why, Melissa, you find yourself in this situation. Because there is only one other person who has yet to to be allowed to fail in an official capacity, and she is to be rewarded with that opportunity to do so at High Stakes. Because Amber Ryan is marketable; because Amber Ryan is popular. Because she is all of those things, and you are not.

That is why you have been relegated to the status of tribute act and warm-up. A means to display the two-dimensional villain I have been drafted to play, as all the stage of that world is dressed to prepare for a hurricane’s re-coronation.

But it does not have to be that way. You do not have to play the role so cruelly and callously assigned to you.

After all, what if you are able to do what no-one – not even yourself, most truthfully – believes you are capable of and defeat the reigning World Bombshells’ Champion? What opportunities might germinate; chances for glory, power and prestige that slowly unfurl and reach up towards a corporate sun that might be inclined to shine upon you more favourably, if you can establish yourself deserving. What if centre stage was yours at some prime time, rather than to a half-empty floor bisected by queues for the concession stands?

Is it too much to expect to be given a chance to succeed?

Unlike Miss Angelos last week, I will give you such special attention. It is within my power to show you that dedication, and I will make it yours. Not because I desire some grandiose display of intent prior to High Stakes, after all, how can I deliver any greater example than the shattering of a hurricane courtesy of the tyre iron held in my thorn-painted hand? I have nothing left to prove in that regard, and so it is only right that we focus our efforts together. Grant for you the right to hold the audience in rapt attention.

In rapturous aplomb.

How they will enjoy watching us together, and while you will remember little of it, I promise it will be spectacular. There is no reason for you to be relegated to some meaningless footnote on a page written for those who have self-authored entire books and volumes. This Sunday, on Climax Control, we have a unique opportunity to focus our attention collectively. To forget those with agendas to disseminate and axes to grind on the whetstone of failed dreams and frustrated legacies.

Melissa, I promise you my entire world because you deserve to see it in all its glory and wonder before yours is subsumed within. It has been so very long since I last welcomed anyone into the Rapture; since my grand design began to free-spin and glide on its own cognition and feelings and decisions. Now it has been set free to deliver us all, it is time to remember that there are always improvements to be made. Adjustments. Enhancements.

I think you offer something of value, and I would very much like to add your distinctiveness to it. I regret only that you will almost certainly resist and in helping you to realise that better way, you will likely be irrevocably harmed and hurt by that help.

Still, you will be centre stage. You will be the focus of my attention. Is that not a fair trade?

You should not view yourself through the lens that they do – that of a Queenpin Proxy; a draftee in the Army of a Painted Hurricane press ganged into some initial, frontal assault to test the enemy defences. Instead, accept a new fate; one of being given the opportunity to try and in that, be absolved of the inevitable failure that follows.

My name is Abigayle. Does that help to humanise me? Give you power and influence over me? Miss Ryan knew my name, and it did not make her shoulder any harder to shatter. You may use it if you think it will help, but it will not.

Would it make you feel better, less coincidental and relegated to insignificance, if I addressed her more directly? If I begged your indulgence for just a few moments to offer a simple and pointed statement of intent. Of fact. Of reality.

Hello, Amber. My name is Abigayle and I have no reason to run or to hide. I represent everything you have ever wanted and to realise it – to make it yours and finally banish the sins of so many lives’ past … All you have to do is come and find me. It will not be difficult to do.

What is difficult, what will take all your focus and determination is what you must do next.

All you have to do is stop talking.





8
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XXIII – A Wolfe in Sheep's Clothing

[The Present – Las Vegas, Nevada, USA]


The mud was soft underfoot, sliding down the hillside in thick clumps as she scrambled up towards the brow, heels digging trenches all the way back down to the valley floor. Somewhere near the top she flipped onto her front, heaving the precious transit case over the lip of the hill as she twisted. It landed in a cluster of gnarled tree roots, exposed and dead where the embankment had slid away in heavy rains. The rock securing her free hand slipped suddenly, beginning to wander down through the mud. She brought her feet up instinctively, but the toes of her boots just gouged wet earth. Her free hand swung upwards, grasping a tree root and breaking it off instantly. 
 
A hand thrust out, clamping tight around her wrist. Painfully tight. It hauled her up. Abigayle rolled onto the top, wet and panting. 
 
“Good to go Ma’am?” 
 
Abigayle nodded, pawing at the sweat stinging her eyes. “Good to go …” She managed, sprawled out across the grass with the stock of her rifle resting on her muddied chest. “Thank you.”
 
Alice turned her own weapon on its side and flicked a gobbet of mud from the cocking handle. “All part of the Corps’ service.”
 
On their belt buckles they crept forward under the low-hanging branches of the trees crowning the hilltop, until the ground fell away sharply out to meet rolling farm fields. Flinging her ILBE in front to rest the stock of her weapon on, Alice surveyed the land below through its scope, panning the muzzle left and right. Shielded by the treeline and an outcrop of rock, Abigayle relaxed the taut muscles in her legs, holding the shivers in check and skin off soaked fabric. Her breath billowed out into the night sky.
 
“I think we found the not-so-Friendly Fire Support responsible for slagging that APV we found earlier. Eighty metres dead ahead, Grain Silo, Hundred Metres left and makin’ real hard work of trying not to be seen.”
 
Abigayle followed the directions with her own scope, picking out a cluster of blurry shapes moving in and out of dead ground. She adjusted for granularity, but the limitations of night vision – of this outdated kit – left her struggling to pick out any detail beyond a luminous green mass.  “I cannot see anything distinctive with this antique. What about Thermal?”
 
“Like a lava lamp, and old or not this kit kills just as surely. Kills people, I mean. Ain’t nothing works too well on Ghosts. Nothing that ain’t man-portable anyhow.”
 
Frowning, Abigayle glanced back through the scope and did her best to focus on the figures and not thoughts of Phantoms. The ethereal nickname for a group of local rebels known for their ability to appear spontaneously with the element of complete surprise, and leave none alive. At least none who did not otherwise wish to be counted amongst the dead.  “Are you sure?”
 
“Two years at MCD San Diego says I’d recognise a parody of tactical advance. Probably some reservist boot with delusions made real by the end of the world. Maybe a POG? Or worse …”
 
Alice’s jaw tightened up in a sneer. “Air Force? Don’t matter either way, the temperature dead zones breaking up their outlines are a dead giveaway. Not unless we started drafting cows into the fight. Things are about desperate enough. Might be poetic, lettin’ them lead us to the slaughter for once.”
 
“How do you know they’re responsible for hitting us?
 
A flash blinded the scope, forcing Abigayle to jerk her head back from the reticule. With her good eye she watched a brilliant point of light erupt from the dark farmland below, dragging a twisted trail of thick smoke as it corkscrewed through the air. It crashed into the silo wall midway up and tumbled in, detonating as it tried to escape through the opposite side. Wood splintered, shearing crops clustered around the blackened stonework base and throwing up a cloud of burning grain that set fire to anything it rained on.   
 
The group spilled out of the dark and into the flickering light of the half-dozen fires they’d started, patting out their smouldering clothes. She could hear voices, or at least the tone – excited, exhilarated. From somewhere up in the blazing top of the silo a section of metal chute lurched out into the night sky, shining and warped. A wild hand threw up in the air picking it out and the gut-rumbling punch of an automatic rifle drowned everything else out. The rounds landed high and wide, disappearing into the burning wreckage and detonating inside with muffled thumps.
 
Alice had seen enough. She slung her ILBE back over her shoulder. “Every Ghost for two dozen miles plus change saw that, or heard it, or felt it – or whatever it is they do. We need to bug out now, before they show up and give those folk somethin’ real to shoot at and miss. Or hit and achieve squat.”
 
“We are still a twenty miles east of the Blue Line and fifteen west of the Green—”
 
“Ma’am,” The Marine interrupted. “If we still had recognisable defensive lines, neat drawn on some map, we wouldn’t be crawlin’ halfway back to California on our belt buckles, being blown up by farmers turned operators. ‘Cept for maybe the Canucks up far north, the Ghosts are everywhere. From sea to shining sea.”
   
Abigayle craned her neck up and over towards the flower girl named after the stars, abruptly and dissonantly stood in the open ahead of the tree line with her feet on the cusp of the hill as it fell away to farmland. “Did you think about helping them?”
 
Keeping her eyes on the burning silo, Abigayle watched the smouldering debris set fire to the surrounding barns and buildings where it settled. “We would only have died with them. They brought it on themselves.”
 
Cassie turned away from the orange glow. “Does it matter to you? Does anything matter? Is there anything at all that would’ve convinced you to stay, to try to defend these people?” 
 
Her hand closed around that familiar transit case, fingers sliding through the dents in the olive-green metalwork. Abigayle shook her head and pulled it in close. “No.” 
 
“The Ghosts took so long to finish them off …” Cassie mused aloud. She turned back towards the fire. “Screamed for so long, begging for help. You didn’t try to help–”
 
“Nobody did,” Abigayle snapped, climbing up to her wet feet. “Not a single one of those of us that survived the attack on the field hospital, even when we were doing our best to save the sick and the lame. Why is it I should simply join those lining up to throw their lives away. It was like trying to fight the sun with a stick …”
 
The flames in the fields below jerked, jumping out of place like a skipped frame. The fine detail of the world began to pixelate; the cold of the night left her bones instantaneously, replaced with comfortable nothingness. Everything bled colour–

 
“Who’re you talking to?”
 
The world – the real one – resolves itself back instantaneously, although the jarring juxtaposition feeds the intense pressure that makes my head ache. Standing in the doorway, clutching an upturned umbrella stands the familiar form of my newest acquaintance; one Avalon Blackthorn. She shakes the fabric, sending rivulets along its waterproof folds to splash against the carpet. Her eyes are narrowed, suspicious, and the bunching in her biceps tell me she is ready for the slightest perturbation. Ready to lash out.

Ready to strike.
 
From the desktop in front of me, I retrieve the upturned ceramic face and bring it up to press against its real, soft counterpart. The straps settle in tight above my ears and that reassuring claustrophobia, an unmistakable feeling of compression, settles in and down. Calmness finds purchase like cold composite against clammy skin. It sticks, and binds.
 
“Sometimes I dream when I am awake,” I reply, turning towards her. “I go to places I have been, and I speak with people I have met. Sometimes they are in impossible places, talking about things they had never seen.”
 
Nodding slowly, Avalon takes a few steps inside and closes the heavyset oak-panelled door behind herself. The bassy rumble of the rain outside is sharply cut out, replaced by the patter of wind-flecked droplets against the glass. “Where’s there, exactly?”
 
“The Killing Fields.”
 
She frowns. “Sounds delightful. Euphemistic, I’m guessing?”

 
[The Rapture]
 
 
There is something almost charming about your enthusiasm, Miss Wolfe. A refreshing frankness that might be equal parts naivety, depending on the emotional intelligence applied to scrutinise. It feels infectious in the way it stands apart from the same, tired cliches which circle around me like screeching spirits, wailing and warning about the same mistakes of the past doomed to repeat. After all, how can I not be a little fascinated by someone who simply recognises an opportunity and intends to do their best to maximise it? That you merely seize a chance and make it yours seems so simplistic, so linear, and yet such honesty sets you apart from virtually every member of this division.

A humble graduate of the Hero Academy, plucked from the masses and deposited onto centre stage at Climax Control, on Sunday, to do their best and realise a dream.

It is almost charming, if it were not so obviously a bitter pill slathered in molasses. Your words are a synthetic sweetness; the medicinal aftertaste engineered to make that internal unpleasantness more palatable to even more refined sensibilities. You are different from all the rest only in so much as you think where others talk.

They have tried to take this Championship from me by bravado and those words, and every one of them have failed – laid low by my thorn-painted hand. An endless cavalcade of pretenders, amateurs, wannabes and never-wills. They tell me I am nothing, they come and then they are in turn made into nothing. A pattern that is quickly reshaping itself into some Möbius Strip of reality-bending regularity. In between these failures, a Wolfe moves in shadow and watches. And waits.

This is not the first time that something wicked this way comes, stalking me. Hungering.

Perhaps you have been biding your time, waiting for the perfect opportunity to strike. Is it mere coincidence that you should pad along the cold path that leads to my door, not a single paw print in the frost, just as my Resplendent Hurricane begins to turn anew? Is there some greater work beginning to stitch itself from plot to realisation? Or, perhaps, I am simply seeing patterns that are no more real than the credentials you present to make your challenge anything more than an aberration.

Perhaps it is nothing more than some random permutation, made a very real risk by the potential to be fatally undermined and distracted just as a predator circles me in the periphery of my vision, while my full attention is turned up to the sky to watch the weather. Caught unawares by the hot stink of breath on the back of my neck and then, as incisors bite down and cut my skin, cut in half.

The Cherokee Peoples of North America tell a tale of two wolves inside each of us. One is the sum of our hopes and dreams, capable of all our greatest works and potential incarnate. Success, contentment, happiness all belong within its hunting grounds. The other is rage, and pain, and fury and every slight ever visited upon us and remembered in the vain hopes of some small semblance of revenge, someday. To feed one is to pick a path from which the totality of your life is decided. What you want, versus what you deserve. Pleasure … Or Pain. There is the powerful desire to spend so much time wondering which one you are; which path you have chosen to pad along and in doing so, tell us so much about who you are …

But their stories are tired and weary like the people who tell them. The richness wrung out by the years and all those tears wept through every wrong and misery inflicted. They are hollowed-out parables, briefly entertaining if the mind’s eye requires a distraction or a spell spent thinking about something inconsequential. Pause to think long enough, and the thread-worn exposition unpicks itself and all that is left are the broken souls who tell it.

When we strip away the Wolfe … What is left, Krystal?

 
[The Present – Las Vegas, Nevada, USA]


The plastic palm of my prosthetic rotates a full three hundred and sixty degrees, servomotors whining as they drive it around. The hard, metal-core phalanges shaped like fingers twist and form a fist. When they extend, I look up.

“It had a real name,” I reply, although I did not know what it was. “It was a literalism.”

She flops down in a leather-backed chair opposite, tossing the wet umbrella onto the floor and throwing her sodden shoes up onto the top of a nearby desk; hands interlocked behind her head. “Take it you helped it along in earning that reputation?”

“No. I did my best to restrict its opportunities.”

Avalon purses her lips. “Got to confess I’m a bit surprised. Had you down as more of a do-er, rather than a prevent-er. Why were you there, anyway?”

“I was a Doctor.”

Her eyes wide slightly and she rocks forward, showing impressive flexibility at the wait to be able to do so without shifting her legs as she moves. “You?”

“Yes, me. Is that surprising?”

She blinks. “Absolutely.”

“Why?”

Her lips part a few times in words that never get a chance, before she settles on a shrug. “Never had you down as the caring type, I suppose. Always thought your talents were in hurting people, not fixing them.”

I cock my head to the side. “I did not care. It was simply something I was good at. It served a purpose until it did not and when it was no longer of use, I discarded it.”

“Life motto?” Avalon smirks, and I nod.

“Yes – at least for what is left of it.”

The smirk falters, and threatens to disappear entirely. Her legs swing away, trainers thumping softly with a squelch against the wet carpet. She leans forward, more focused but does not say anything for several long moments.

“I thought of you as someone cloaked in secrecy,” She begins. “Like I’d never get a straight answer from you about anything. As if you couldn’t even tell me your name with a straight face. Not that I could see it if you did, anyway.”

It is such a simple thing, so I give it to her. “My name is Abigayle.”

Avalon stares again, weighing up her next words carefully, before  gesturing at my mask. “So why is it that somehow, you’ve ended up one of the most honest people I know?”

That is relatively straightforward. “Because I am not attempting to be someone else, to project a different version of myself. There are so many different faces belonging to those few important people in your life, and they all cycle through them so quickly nowadays.”

Another long pause, punctuated by the drumbeat of rain-on-glass.

“Are you going to take on Red?”

Slowly, I climb to standing and step forwards until the short distance between us is virtually zero. Avalon tenses, fists balled, but she does not rise and she does not flinch.

“It would be foolish to look beyond Miss Wolfe,” I reply simply. “To lose her heart through distraction would be so anticlimactic, do you not think?”

At those words, Avalon turns to look at the World Bombshells’ Championship draped across the arm of the chair sat in the far corner. An overhead lamp picks out the unmistakable crimson sheen of blood, scrawled in a shape across the faceplate. Her blood.

Her fists relax and I retrieve the title to return and place it on her lap. She looks down, watching her own reflection in the dirty gold.

“Would you like to meet the real Amber Ryan?” I offer. “The one who would give up everything – her husband, her gumshoe, you – just to have this again? Simply to be reunited. Would you like to strip away the cocksureness, the acerbic wit and venomous spite and meet the brutal, violent little carnival girl who would claw out your insides to take back what has been taken from hers?

Avalon hefts the Championship up in her hands, squeezing the sweat-stained leather. Eventually, she looks up.

She nods, and then I do too.

“I will show you nothing but truth, but in the meantime it is necessary to deal with another falsehood that has crept up on us while we have both been distracted and looking elsewhere.”

“Krystal?”

“The Wolfe in Sheep’s Clothing,” I clarify. “A potential heartbreak in the shape of chicken soup for the soul.”

Blinking, the younger woman laughs. “What the fuck are you talking about?”

And I laugh too, because I am not sure. There is something refreshing about the clarity of purpose our relationship shares. There is nothing more to gain to use against my Resplendent Hurricane when it comes to her former protege: that came at the end of a plastic index and forefinger crushing the soft tissue of her palette, until the Referee intervened to stop it all. From that point on, there was no further utility. No reason to engage. No purpose.

And yet, there was an eagerness and a hunger that was difficult to ignore. A passion for something more – a yearning for greatness in whatever ambiguous shape it took and something altogether darker burning in the pit of her gut. For all the qualities that Avalon seemed to share with Miss Ryan, they were nothing alike. Not really.

Avalon harboured a deep sense of injustice that demanded retribution. Vengeance. She thirsted for what had been denied; an equaliser against all the wrongs inflicted her way. She would not simply write off the agonies she had endured because the world was undeniably, unsalvagably fucked … So to speak.

That was not the way it was going to be.

In some stranger way still, that desire for more found more commonality with Miss Wolfe than Miss Ryan. After all, the former had apparently simply lucked into a World Championship opportunity by virtue of being in the wrong place at the right time. And yet …

Krystal stank of dishonesty. Of another face worn over the front to beguile and obfuscate. A mask. There was a hunger, like Avalon’s, but it was impure. Twisted. Grotesque and self-centered. It was transactional, rather than transformational.

From my vantage point I can see the way Miss Blackthorn covets the title she holds. Her mind whirls with the possibilities, with the kudos. With the recognition. The self-worth. She sees the potential not in simply being Champion but how being Champion might give her something worth building upon. A foundation from which all the terrible wrongs that have been visited upon her can be compartmentalised, if not quite forgotten. Not yet.

Krystal, on the other hand … She is engaged only as far as her success can be expedited and fast-tracked. A title change in a few days, and reaping the rewards thereafter.

Turning away, the plastic fingers of my prosthetic whir as the wind flings a smattering of rain against the glass to crack like the staccato beat of a machine gun. It is necessary to deal with a Wolfe before turning my attention towards the Weather.


[The Rapture]
 
 
When we look past your exploits at the Hero Academy, beyond Cassie and her apparent addiction to pornography and other whimsical aspects of your jovial little life, what carries the weight of you? What will meet me underneath the bright overhead lights on Sunday?

I am not your opportunity, Krystal, but I am your salvation and your education. In your desire to elevate yourself, to feed the Wolfe that promises your greatest works, you have mistaken the SCW Bombshells’ Championship for some guarantee of greatness but in your fervent, blind hope, you have made a terrible mistake. This title does not bestow credibility, or success, or fill the emptiness that lingers where the noise and cameras are shut outside. Instead, it is a simple anvil. A fire-tested weight against which comers and their dreams are smashed and dashed to pieces on an altar of their own misplaced sense of worth and ego.

Polished brass, gold plating and precious stones on a sweat-stained leather backing are every bit as murderous as a hammer when it is wielded by those who know its toxic, attractive power. Amber Ryan understood it, even if she could not resist it. Roxi Johnson survived it, although who can say how long even a Superhero would have resisted its corrosive effects. I will wield it like a scalpel, cutting the veil that clouds the judgement of so many of those that call this division and company a professional home.

What would you do with it? Thank your friends and wives for making your victory possible before slowly, inexorably, poisoning every last one of those relationships as you progressively surrender every aspect of your life to defend it and retain it.

Until you begin to starve one Wolfe and feed the other, despite your better judgement. Despite the parables that are wailing and screaming at you to heed their wisdom.

I do not think you can handle what you would become, Krystal. It is the worst-kept secret in all of SCW, understood by a startling few and shared only between those at the top of their respective divisions. After all, who would willingly contract the most virulent cancer imaginable, one that effortlessly crosses from mind to grey matter and finally, hollows out your bones and turns your skin a sickly purple?

I do not think you are made to survive that, and I will make sure you never suffer such a burden.

On the subjects of burdens, how does Makayla feel about the one you would so willingly and blindly inflict on her? What does one of your wives think of the idea that you would give up so much, endure such agony, for the chance to suffer an even greater one once the Bombshells’ Championship had riddled you with its poisonous obsession?

It is so very important to me that you understand what is waiting for you on Sunday, Krystal. I am not interested in healthy competition. I am neither piqued or pleased by the idea of honest battle and there is no valour for you in trying either. What you have done to get here is irrelevant, and the story you tell gives me no reason to turn the page and look for a sudden twist in which the Girl who cried Wolfe comes good, at long, long last. At Climax Control, I will inflict every modicum of pain available to my thorn-painted hand; extract innumerable agonies in exchange for every moment you spend in my presence.

You should never have come here, as if this were ever some simple athletic competition. As if regardless of what happens on Sunday, that you will return home to be with your family on a Monday morning sore but none the worse for your trials and tribulations. I promise, Krystal, you will carry the hurt I give you for the rest of your long days, until the golden summer of your life turns to autumnal red. When your daughter comes of age to make her own, independent decisions, she will have no better role model than what becomes of you as a result of the poor choices that led you to cross my frosted path.

Such a powerful exercise in could have, should have not.

It smacks of such incredible delusion or cynicism to cross that path, given all the bridges I have burnt to ashes and carbon, with your polyamorous trifecta in tow and Rachel so newly recovering from her recent time in hospital. You have loaded up the most precious things in your life that shine so much more brightly than a title belt, and driven them into a land riven with bandits, cutthroats and terrible, formless things that move silently in the dark.

In spirit – because they live through you and you, them, and pain delivered to one is as surely felt by the other(s) – you have brought them to me. You might as well have asked them to step into the ring likewise and share the coming fate physically. The fallout will just as certainly be theirs to cope with.

Did you make this choice implicitly, foolishly, because you are so blinded by the potential for glory in some euphemistic dash “Out West” that you have driven your loved ones and your entire future into a graveyard stretched out under a hot yellow sun?

Worse, is this some deliberate and measured act?

Have you arranged your harem in some elaborate opening gambit, seeking to encircle me and dominate the board?

There is no new beginning for you here, Krystal. Only your end. Do you know how many sing-song voices have predicted their success at my expense? Have you taken a moment from dreaming your dreams to look at the litany of the hopeful, the deluded and the desperate and extracted the trends which paint an irresistible reality? Their names roll into the past, becoming ever older and more forgotten but together they represent the natural order of things.

They come for me, and they leave with wounds that will last a lifetime.

Last week, my Resplendent Hurricane found the strength to stand unaided, at least physically, and challenge me with a strength of will that had been until now as unwilling as her broken body. Talk turns to what I will do, and whether I will accept. Digital and real-world whispers vie with each other to divine my intent and my mood; what am I thinking behind this composite face of mine?

Rest assured that any notion of vengeance and more likely, salvation, on Miss Ryan’s part is furthest from my mind. What else is there left to prove? I took her career, I took her health and via convoluted engagement with a Superhero I took her heart. There is no part left for her to play in my game, or any other. Why dwell on shadows when there is nothing walking in them?

I do not fear Amber Ryan. I have already broken her into pieces she uses to continue to hurt herself with.

My attention – my sole focus – is on you, Miss Wolfe. After picking free the fleece you use to dress yourself in a form more benign and gentile, the slavering, furious hunger underneath that can only belong to the chomping maw of a predator bares those pointed teeth. Happenstance or coincidence or deliberate premeditation aside, I will not be caught by surprise looking in one direction only to be ensnared and cut down by something that stalks me from the opposite.

There is a curious trend that is becoming more apparent to me. It began with Miss Johnson, and it grows stronger with you. A desire to foster talent, train and support some new generation. My Songbird did likewise, and even my Resplendent Hurricane chose a protege before she grew bored with Miss Blackthorn and left her for a new and brutal teacher in her place. What is it you fear?

To be forgotten? To surrender to time and inevitable entropy and have your name and your deeds pass from living memory? Is it purely egotistical? A hunger to be responsible for even more; to be able to claim glory in another name for your own?

Why do you put so much of yourself into someone else? Functional immortality, or jealousy and a greed for success?

Perhaps that is something I should explore. I have so many wonderful things I could show a prospective pupil – so many choice miseries and careful suffering cultivated across years of observing the very worst that all this world and everyone on it could imagine to inflict on each other … Would that not make for worthy lessons? Would I experience that same intoxicating high in living vicariously through someone else?

Could I have a legacy that would outlast me? I must admit, the idea that somehow everything I have worked for could be perpetuated, be given a life all of its own to grow and develop is an enticing one.

Such things are for a future it is not yet time to see. Firstly, it is necessary to put an end to your opportunity before it has in itself a chance, ironically, to become something more tangible and concrete. Despite the best efforts of so many, I am still World Bombshells’ Champion. Although stronger and better women than you have tried, none have been able to take from me what they do not understand would eventually defeat them as surely as I did. And have.

In some strange way, I will protect you from yourself, Krystal. In an altogether more practical one, I will disabuse you. Clear away all the delusions and misconceptions that have combined such to make you believe that you simply have to work hard. Be confident. Be persistent … And what you desire more than anything will simply be.

It is getting late in the arch-time of everything I have done in this company, and elsewhere. The hours are beginning to dwindle and even the minutes must be jealously guarded, used well for there are so few of them left. With each passing day I become only more focused on ensuring all of the things I have worked so hard to deliver will come to pass. It is not a matter of confidence, or persistence, but simply belief.

With belief, I have retired a legend, defeated a superhero and conquered a dozen faces who would have given anything to stop me and gave everything trying. There are no parables required, no euphemisms or metaphors. I am no spirit animal in twain, or Wolfe in Sheep’s Clothing. With the deepest irony that cuts almost to and through the bone, I exude absolute honesty even as I cover my face and hide it from the world.

Everyone else is a liar, yourself included. Whether directed out into the world or to yourself, the truth is twisted and misrepresented to better fit the biases and hopes and dreams – and nightmares – of those that speak it. But I do not need to change its shape to make use of reality. I promised I would change you, for the better, and I will.

I will save you from a fate worse than victory on Sunday. I will save you from the burden and the agony of reigning supreme at some imagined summit. My burden will be to continue to dash those, like you, against the anvil of this World Championship.

I am the way and the truth and through it, I will deliver the salvation promised.

Welcome to the Rapture, Krystal. It will be so much more than you ever thought possible.



9
Supercard Archives / Re: MASQUE (c) v DIAMOND STEELE - WORLD TITLE
« on: October 28, 2022, 04:21:31 PM »
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XXII – Carbon

[The Past – The Killing Fields, Southeast Nagorno-Karabakh, Central Caucasus]

Alice pulled the rifle tight in against her chest and swung her legs over the rim of the crater, heels pedalling hard into the glassy wall as she eased down. It cracked underfoot; a thin shining crust of superheated earth punched through to cold, misshapen ejecta. She slipped below the terminus, an equator made from shadows that marked where the harsh midday glare overhead couldn’t reach. The temperature dropped, chilling her damp skin and she blinked away the disorientation of brightness being replaced by dark. Just above the floor a good thirty feet down, she pulled up the tattered edge of a camouflage net and slipped underneath.
 
Alice snapped open the quick-release clasp of her sling and removed the magazine from the weapon, working the action to clear the chamber and make her weapon safe. “Negative contacts Ma’am. All quiet across what’s left of the killing fields. Expect everything else that sweats and breathes has the same idea as us to wait out the day.”
 
Abigayle pulled the pack in between her legs where she sat and nodded, pressing a palm against her spine and grimacing with the effort of straightening it. The net sat loosely against the top of her head, tickling the irritated scalp and scabbing cuts. An unmistakable smell of damp rose up from inside the folds of her pack as she fished out its contents. All the wrapping and double insulation in the world wouldn’t keep things dry for long out in the field. Have operations, will soak. She wiped damp fingertips against her thighs and only managed to smear them brown, looking over to see Alice kicking her own trousers free of bare legs.
 
“Not a minute too soon!” She said. “Take another day and they could stand to attention without me in ’em.”
 
The plastic bag holding her rations streamed with water, a mixture of condensation and life outdoors and Abigayle set it down by the dirt, shaking the plastic over a dented cup to collect the run-off. It tasted awful, but she shook every drop free and swirled it around her dry mouth. Fresh water was a luxury, potable water essential. Something that wouldn’t poison badly enough to take you off your feet being the hot backup. She pushed the cup back into place over the canteen and shook it, but precious little sloshed back. Less than a third full with just one more in reserve. 
 
Abigayle’s cracked tongue ran across her rough gums, pressing against an abscess. It wasn’t going to be enough. Her free hand pawed around in the cold dirt until her knuckles wrapped painfully against the transit case and she pulled it in close. The skin of her palm caught on the edges of ruts and grooves gouged into the toughened plastic, pinching and nicking. Reassuring her it was still there. 

Some prescription medications, a little local currency. Some jewellery. Not much, but enough to potentially buy them some respite or enough time to talk their way out of trouble if it came following up from the smoking remains left behind.

Two weeks since the field hospital had been overrun by rebel forces – or at least one of the myriad irregular forces busy killing each other throughout the region. She had long since given up trying to identify which group was responsible for specific atrocities at any one time; an inevitable consequence of dirty, brutal civil war in places that held no useful natural resource or any other compelling reason for someone more important to get involved.

No careful, ordered withdrawal in columns of disciplined fighting men and women. Instead … A free-for-all. Every fighting man and woman for themselves and those that weren’t primarily there to do the fighting, like Abigayle, were left to their own devices.

It had been a calculated risk to come out here, to offer her medical services to those that paid first and asked questions never. Fortunately, she had been able to stay ahead of any number of roving gangs and other wayward groups and having met up with a particularly drawling American from somewhere in the deepest south, they had both agreed to work as a pair in their efforts to find a way back to relative civilisation.

Or at least the good Doctor had no further use for her.
 
She held the case tight against her hip, and Abigayle’s fingers came away blackened with soot and streaked by carbon. A reminder of reinforced armour plating and eardrums being burst from the inside-out, scalding showers of superheated coolant spraying from the end of a whipping hose. The crack of bone and the overwhelming cocktail of burning engine oil, melting rubber and cooked flesh. And that was just one armoured vehicle, just a handful of men and women. Multiply a thousand times—   
 
Cross-legged opposite, Alice was down to underwear with her rifle balanced across her knees, stripping it and arranging the pieces meticulously on a worn foam mat. She glanced up with a battered toothbrush wedged into the business end of the chamber. “Everything alright, Ma’am?”
 
Abigayle’s head snapped up and she came back to the bottom of a crater somewhere on the pockmarked plains. Thoughts of the case at her side, liberated from the gutted remains of a burning transport the day before took a little respite.  “I … Cannot decide between the Vegetarian Omelette and starvation.”
 
Alice squeezed a small torch between her teeth, reply incomprehensible as she aimed the beam through a multi-segmented bolt. Abigayle watched her try to talk around the rubber and plastic filling most of her mouth for a good minute before giving up.
 
“Lance Corporal?”
 
She polished the face of the bolt with a shining silver cloth, head bowed and eyes rising to meet Abigayle’s before dropping the torch into her lap. “Sorry Ma’am. Not enough hands. Alice is fine.” 
 
The taller woman pulled the sling of her own weapon over her head, setting it down. It felt heavy in her hands, alien. Such an imprecise and brutal thing. She doubted it would be all that useful if things became desperate. “I can help—”
 
“Prefer to do it myself,” Alice interrupted. She grinned, pushing the bolt back into the carrier inside the chamber. “Sorry Ma’am, habit I made the hard way back during boot camp and drilled in too many times since. Never let someone else clean your rifle; not unless you’re willing to give up the sureness that comes with doing the job yourself and knowing when you pull that trigger and mean it, she does the job.”
 
Abigayle nodded, glancing at the camouflaged trousers crumpled between them. “That is good advice – I understand the priorities.”
 
“Can fight without functional pants, Ma’am,” Alice said with authority that sounded like it was borne from experience, somehow. “Believe me. Can’t fight without a functional weapon.”
 
And Abigayle did believe her. This was her world, after all. Brutal, violent. Murderous. She lifted the bag holding the rations up and prodded it with a finger, frowning at the way it sank into the foil, swallowed up to the knuckle. “I will take care of what passes for food then, and brave the omelette too if you can tolerate the stroganoff.”
 
The click-clack of a cycled action echoed around the crater floor. “Happy to take the omelette, Ma’am. Actually, prefer it.”
 
Abigayle shook her head as she squeezed the rations in her hands and twisted them sharply, setting off the internal reaction that would at least make it a hot, inedible mess. “You must be popular in the field when it is time to eat. A powerful woman in any trade.”
 
“Not rightly sure why I don’t mind it.” Alice pushed a fresh magazine into place, readied her weapon and set it carefully down on the sleeping mat in front. “Don’t know how else to explain it except God-given. Maybe blessed me with a stomach tough enough to cope with it and a brain dumb enough to like it. Pass me your rifle Ma’am and I’ll give it the once-over.”
 
Down in the dirt the stroganoff and omelette tipped over onto their sides as they boiled, crinkled silver balls all bloated and pulsing. Every bit as if a second team had taken responsibility to build on the appalling taste concocted by the first and derive a cooking method that somehow made the whole thing look even less appealing. 
 
Alice flicked the matted bristles of her toothbrush with a fingernail, before thrusting it inside another trigger housing. The head came out caked in burnt carbon and chunks of mud dried hard like concrete. She set it down, palms smeared black. “Maple slices.”
 
Abigayle raised an eyebrow and stabbed a hole in the top of each of the rations, her nose wrinkling as the steam billowed up, bringing the waft of something pretending to be mushrooms. 
 
“Love the maple slices that always come with the number threes and sixes.” Alice pulled a courser brush free from her cleaning kit and got back to work, tongue pushing the inside of her cheek out between broken sentences. “Would make the omelette my own cross to bear for one of ‘em.”
 
“Even if you secretly liked them regardless?”
 
“Got to do what needs to be done. Ma’am. Pleasures in the field few and far between. Sometimes all you need is a little maple slice in your life and suddenly, the rain doesn’t feel so cold on your neck.”
 
“Perhaps you will get lucky and find one in here,” Abigayle said with the slightest ghost of a smile that stretched the gaunt skin around her jaw, rattling the contents of the bag still dripping with condensation. 
 
The Lance Corporal frowned, lines in her forehead pulling down tufts of blonde hair stuck fast to the skin by a layer of dust. “Oh no, Ma’am. Only get those slices of military heaven with threes and sixes. We’re enjoying a nine and fourteen here.”
 
Abigayle leaned down and dared a deeper whiff of the stroganoff. A definite mistake. She recoiled, trying to fan away the smell with a flailing hand that made the camouflaged netting over their heads billow up. “You know them by heart?”
 
“Been eating ‘em a fair while Ma’am; even before I ended up here,” She replied, ignoring the incredulous expression sent her way and tipping the trigger housing over. Accumulated filth dropped to join the dirt and the harsh, synthetic smell of fresh lubrication oil combined with vegetarian omelette.
 
It all mingled in the back of the Doctor’s throat and stuck there like eating your meal from the top of a running engine block. The only positive being it couldn’t have made the rations any less appealing. Nothing could. In the end though, she was just indulging in the most ancient human tradition of all – something even more timeless than fraternity or honour; carrying a greater legacy than any regimental colour steeped in centuries of history or blood.
 
Complaining. Honed to the finest of arts and ultimately the singular unifying experience of anyone serving any flag of any nation anywhere, ever. Or the highest bidder. She was going to eat this, reluctantly devour every repulsive morsel and then lick the inside of the bag clean of grease until the anti-bacterial finish started to wear away. Because she had spent the last two weeks eating a quarter of the calorific intake needed to do half the miles they’d been forced to cover, ever since the field hospital had been overrun and probably shelled into slag. Because her body was consuming itself in a desperate attempt to keep up.

She looked at the half-naked woman opposite, apparently in her element; tongue pushing out the corner of her cheek as she worked. What a curious simpleton.
 
 

[The Rapture]

Forged in the crucible of titanic pressures; moulded into something enduring and untarnished. Cut to a multi-faceted, brilliant shine that reflects any and all attempts to probe, to understand. To interrogate. No matter how bright the light sent its way, there is nothing to see but the clear reflection of the observer looking in. Nothing of meaning, of import, gets out. A one-way, crystalline mirror that offers only perfect symmetry.

Your namesake. A diamond.

Oh, how long you bided your time buried in the soft mud and rock, waiting to be unearthed. Feeling the subtle tremors of those that walked with the sun warm on their backs above, enjoying their moments and heartaches while you existed in the dark. Patient and hewn from relentless, incredible waiting. A matter of that time, until all the world and the people on it finally brush the dirt from your gleaming, glittering faces and behold the sight – give you your due. Behold something incredible and worthy of recognition. Respect.

Is that what you think you are?

Finally plucked from the rock and the shit, painstakingly cut and polished and made incredible, beautiful, and set into place in trappings more worthy of your stunning shine. Affixed into some symbol of regency and pomp; made a centrepiece of power, influence and worth. Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown, but not for the most dazzling jewel that sits at its apex encircled by bands of platinum and sterling silver. Nothing so beautiful could be so concerned with such a mundane a thing as a burden. Up there, at the zenith of such artisan, masterfully-crafted apparel you are so much closer to God than the ground you came out from, after all.

A diamond in a crown.

And now they all gather around in orderly queries, faces pressed up against reinforced glass, to gaze and wonder. Sat plush on your velvet-lined cushion, sparkling under halogen lamps overhead, your time at the centre of all attention reaches its peak. After your recent exploits, now comes your greatest moment and opportunity. A chance, at last, to take what has for too long been in the hands – resting on the head – or on the shoulders of others.

Yours, if you can win a game of particularly high stakes.

You invest too much in the wrong metaphors, Miss Steele. In addition to mischaracterizing the parallels you think you draw from a particular arrangement of carbon atoms, you place such enormous merit in the symbology of something designed and constructed to rely entirely on appearance over substance. Lineage and legacy over any real influence on the future. I am at a loss to understand where you think your devotion to an outdated form of government of a small and bleak little island in the North Atlantic will lead you, other than enabling a parasocial relationship that could never have existed, even before entropy finally made a King from a Queen.

Do you understand the inherent powerlessness of your apparent inspiration? That a Queen is imbued with all the authority of a realm but is so constrained in its application that to undertake the smallest act unilaterally, would be to invite the dissolution of her role and the loss of all that precious prestige? That attending banquets, racing horses and inducting the upwardly mobile into archaic chivalric orders named after roses and thistles is nothing more than meaningless public relation exercises or distractions to pass the years and decades?

Step out from your wrought-iron gates, direct the driver to stop your Daimler Limousine at the head of the Mall and ask those that represent the real world just how lauded you actually are. Ivory towers and one-way, crystalline mirrors. Do you truly believe that evoking the name of some hereditary tourist money trap will somehow spur you on to greater achievement? When we meet in Las Vegas in a few days’ time, how will an octogenarian newly buried under the veined marble floors of Westminster Abbey make you any more capable of defeating me?

The greatest irony of course in this being that even if through some hypothetical absurdity, that Monarch could be asked, questioned on her thoughts regarding your insufferable loyalty and inconceivable dedication, she would not even know your name.

I grow tired of the disrespect, Kath-Lyn, and the lack of originality in the paying of that disrespect. You are not afraid of me, in the same way none of the others were. My achievements are linearised; made two-dimensional and drained of colour so that I can be more easily dismissed as some trope-ish boogeywoman. You are vibrant and shining bright and I am some formless shadow that apes and howls in the background. Somehow, you have simultaneously appointed yourself to the irreconcilable roles of Underdog and Favourite. 

You guarantee a win? You will become World Bombshells’ Champion?

You will be put into long-term community care. You will be left with wounds that will permanently twist your skin and ache on cold November days for a decade plus to come. You will put a lock on your bathroom cabinet, if only to stop a teenage Juliet from counting – or worse, experimenting – with the dozen brown plastic bottles all bearing STEELE, KATE in a cluster of prescription-strength reminders of your failure.

All you have earned is the right to be disabused of your delusions. Your opportunity is simply one of expectation management, to be given the relatively rare gift of having your dreams scaled back to fit within the envelope of available resources. The historical evidence of your multiple title matches and multiple failures, are simply a trend that reaches its latest affirming datapoint in Las Vegas on Sunday.

Once again, you have confused the symbol for the source of its power. It is not the diamond on the crown, but the authority that is representative upon the head that wears it. You believe that by virtue of holding the Bombshells’ World Championship, all the things that have eluded you thus far will somehow be yours to enjoy. That by virtue of being a Champion, you will be treated and acknowledged like one. It is a fairytale of the strength best left to read to your daughter at night.

The title you have become so focused on making yours is made relevant only by the exploits of those that carry it. The Championship itself is meaningless without this lineage – it has neither value or power if it is held by those that give nothing to it … And so many have given so much. Some have made it a beacon, burning with the strength of their own morality like Miss Johnson did once upon a time. Others have simply cut out their own heart and replaced it, like whirling painted Hurricanes.

And as for me? I have simply recognised this title for what it has always been. A gold-plated beartrap; a slow-acting lacquered poison inset with precious stones. The long death; lingering and agonising. It is so remarkable to see what people will do to each other, to themselves, for the opportunity to die slowly with this in their twitching hands …

It will not bring you glory because you have it, Miss Steele, and that is why you will never have it.

This is not a biblical allegory and we are not larger-than-life characters in some leatherbound compendium of bedtime stories. You highlight fiction to try to draw potential parallels when we come to exchange miseries with each other, but they are noteworthy because they are unreal. People like you, Kath-Lyn, do not win because dreaming and building a complex web of hopes and suppositions will never translate into real-world success. Wishing to be Champion will not make you Champion. Turning me into a caricature of some enormous, ponderous giant will not make the agony of your soft palate being crushed under hard plastic any more tolerable.

I am tired of the disrespect shown by mewling, screeching hens that cluck and dig in the dirt because they lack the intelligence to articulate their position beyond farmyard insults. You are all beginning to bleed into each other and your names become synonymous – a Zdunich by any other name, a Steele; your arguments are carbon-copies embossed one after the other until they are recitable from memory.

If it is not the fact I choose to hide my face that bobs as low-hanging, blooming fruit in the light breeze, it is the way I talk. As if some central script has been composed and circulated amongst my so-called challengers, to spare them the effort of having to think for themselves. If my prose is too complex, the ideas it conveys confusing and unclear, then let me adopt a style even your daughter can comprehend and then, if necessary, relay to you:

You are an afterthought. You are of no consequence to me at all, and I am going to hurt you so very badly.

Is that sufficiently clear of purpose?



[The Past – The Killing Fields, Southeast Nagorno-Karabakh, Central Caucasus]

She pulled the sleeve of her fatigues up and made a fist. A thin rope of muscle bulged out from the bony ridge of her forearm until it met the prosthetic, making the scars across her skin flex. Stabbing a pair of spoons down into both rations, Abigayle passed one over. 
 
“What did you do before you came here?”
 
Alice struggled to get words out through a mouthful of synthetic vegetable mush, chewing on the syllables and the chow. “Ma’am?”

Even hot, the contents were already congealing on their way from the bag to Abigayle’s lips. “Before you ever knew of the delights of maple slices and omelettes.”
 
The Lance Corporal smacked her lips clean. “Worked for a theatre company out of Saint Louis, in the great state of Missouri just a hop northeast of there if we’re measuring distances in continents, I guess. Ended up there right after High School and then spent a few years in the U.S. Army. Wound up pretty good at shootin’ and the like, word gets around and got a job offer to come all the way down here, south of the equator and all that to join in all this craziness.”
 
Abigayle let the spoon hang in the air just long enough to push through the cramping of her stomach, as it struggled and shifted with the sudden influx of something resembling food. “You exchanged your microphone for a rifle?”
 
“Only dogs can hear me sing Ma’am,” Alice replied. She was already reduced to scraping dried mushroom substitute from the inside of the foil. “A little better at building the world for those folks that can carry a tune, though. I did set design, stage dressing. Can’t take a magical evening ride through Arabia without a flying carpet and you’d be surprised how easy it is to asphyxiate the cast if you don’t know a thing or two about managing dry ice …” 
 
She tore open the ration pack at the seam to give her an angle into the corners and their precious residue. “I took care of the mundane so the talented folk could make some magic. Suppose you could say I got inspired by one of the most magical there ever was.”
 
The rough surface of Abigayle’s tongue dragged across the foil and, busy trying to turn the aftertaste into something she could swallow, was only able to raise an eyebrow. 
 
“Miss Judy Garland. She just stole a little piece of me the first time I saw her looking forlorn out that window; made my troubles melt away like those lemon drops she sang about. Maybe I latched on, one midwestern girl to another pretending to be one but she never gave it back. Wasn’t so good with my voice but I made up for it with my hands and like I told my Drill Instructor back at Parris Island, it’s a transferable skill.”   
 
Abigayle frowned and reached into the bag between her thighs, pulling out a handful of white capsules. “How did your Instructor respond to that?”
 
“He sure shouted a lot right after, but they all did all the time so can’t say it was definitely related.” Alice ran the edge of her spoon up and down the inside of the ration pack, taking one last taste of grease and metal. “Building sets and props for a cast; mounting section attacks and taking hills and houses – it’s all the same to me Ma’am. Got to be good with your hands to make a yellow brick road spiral on a stage or close with the enemy and kill ‘em.”
 
Rolling the capsules around in her palm Abigayle took a second to compose herself, before bringing them up to her lips and crunching through. As she chewed her mouth quickly filled with thick, bubbling foam that was supposed to taste like mint but got no closer than the stroganoff did to getting it right. All she could taste was burning bicarbonate, stinging her gums and making the tip of her tongue numb as it swirled around.
 
Across the floor of the crater Alice’s face contorted, cheeks bulging and tinged red, her eyes squeezed almost shut. She had a single hand clasped tight around the top of her water canteen, hard enough to flex the plastic but it stayed nestled in the dirt. As awful as they were, the capsules were designed to clean their teeth and gums without water, even if they were not designed to do it gently. Abigayle swallowed the last of it down, riding out a momentary gag and wiping roughly at her chapped lips with the back of a sleeve. 
 
As awful as they were, she had seen what lack of oral hygiene could do over time. Abigayle would gladly finish off a whole week’s supply of those capsules at once before she pulled the rotten splinters of a tooth out of someone’s screaming head. Again. 

Grimacing with the taste and the effort, Alice dragged her pack across the blackened embers underneath, pausing as something glittered in the disturbed dirt and rock below. Leaning forward, she pawed at the soil, scooping it up in a handful and beginning to syphon through it with her free hand.

“Huh,” She mumbled, turning over a fragment spit-cleaned back into a brilliant shine.

The taller woman cocked her head to the side. “What is it?”

A few more broken shards revealed themselves both in her palm and between the furrows of rocky soil upturned by the movement of her rucksack. “Gems, I think. An emerald … A sapphire too.”

“That’s diamond,” She nodded with a forefinger pointed down at the ground. Reaching out, Abigayle carefully picked up the slither of a shattered face and held it up. “Always thought diamond was supposed to be real strong.”

She rolled it carefully around in her palm. “It resists abrasion, scratching. It is hard …” Abigayle began, before letting the shard drop back down into the dirt. “But it cannot endure a sharp shock. It is brittle and under a sudden impact, it will break. I wonder why it was left behind.”

Alice clapped her hands together, letting the broken pieces fall back to join the slither of diamond below. “This whole area was levelled, pretty indiscriminately from the looks. Doubt they bothered going door-to-door to check for anything valuable … Or anyone inside.”

Abigayle mused on that, thoughts turned towards the cluster of shattered concrete pillars and twisted steel girders dotted around the perimeter of the crater and all across the ruined landscape for miles in every direction. “It seems inefficient not to make use of these resources.”

Inevitably, thoughts turned to the pack secured by her side. Settling the rucksack under her head and turning over, Alice’s muffled voice bounced against the damp earth surrounding.

“Some people don’t care about looks or value, Ma’am. Just want to inflict a whole host of misery and suffering on anything and anyone around.”



[The Rapture]

You are a silly little girl with less common sense than the eleven year old who inconceivably looks up to you as if you have anything of value or worth to teach. With even the smallest helping of emotional intelligence, you should be able to recognise that I am beyond anything you have faced before in the stop-start-fail chain of meaningless clashes and intermittent, middling title reigns you consider a career. I have defeated the greatest competitors in this company and have retired dictionary-defined legends. In my time within this organisation my record speaks for itself because I do not feel the need to highlight or draw attention to it – and yet you claim I am no threat?

This is not Juliet’s playground, or the farmyard within which the hens can strut safe behind the fence wire. This is very, very real and on Sunday you will learn that no amount of elementary-school psychological horseplay will reduce the suffering you are now long overdue to collect.

You wish to talk about earning opportunities? It is difficult to engage in good-faith with your accusations, given you have “earned” a World Title Match with a single match victory only a few weeks before. Tell me, Miss Steele … When was your last competitive outing beforehand? When was your last successful outing?

I would be very careful about invoking Miss Hernandez’ name in vain. The Biggest Bitch on the Block has had relatively little to say since she talked herself into losing everything: her record-breaking reign, her credibility … Everything. You are in prime position to take up the mantle as her protege and repeat those same mistakes, at my thorn-painted hand.

You have paid nothing except ignorance, and that is a currency which earns nothing but scorn.

Despite their foibles, I have always offered my opponents the chance to grow, to become more than they are – an opportunity to be changed for the better and although you have sorely tested my patience, I extend the same to you. In this case, however, the mechanism for that change is not an uplift or renewal: there is no place in the Rapture to be won. Instead, Miss Steele, you will be rearranged. Reconstituted into a new form that pleases me in more accurately mimicking who you really are.

You think of yourself as a diamond, some tetrahedral arrangement: each metaphorical carbon atom joined to four others such that their electrons are fixed, the structure rigid and covalent strength made manifest. A person and personality so hard that it resists all attempts to scratch, to indent. Even the worst of the world rebounds helpless against your smooth, polished, crystalline skin. Impervious and untouchable. It goes some way to explain why the things you say have no relation to the wider world you live in, since the latter has no way to penetrate the dense ignorance that rebuffs every attempt to teach or share.

But, of course, this betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of materials science. Something hard by its definition cannot be particularly tough and so we come to the reality of my challenger for the Bombshells’ World Championship: that while she effectively resists all attempts to gouge and pockmark, she is no more able to resist a hammer blow than claim success in any of her previous title opportunities. You are brittle, and an impact of sufficient strength will shatter you into constituent pieces fit for nothing more than decorative jewellery.

Better to find another arrangement that more accurately suits who you really are, and as promised we simply need to rearrange what is already there. From one particular arrangement of carbon atoms to another. By offering only three bonds instead of four, we obtain something that crumbles and bleeds against any material offering the slightest pressure. With it, your failures and inadequacies can be laid bare in written word. Diamond does not accurately convey the real you, Kath-Lyn … But graphite does.

With a weak, hexagonal structure, the layers of graphite slide over each other becoming malleable, soft. In this way, it bends and contorts and assumes whatever shape it is driven to make. Suddenly, all the external factors and influences of the world have direct purchase and twist you into a new form more fitting. More deserving.

Does that not feel more comfortable? To stop pretending you are something precious, unyielding and untarnished and instead adopt a reality more closely aligned with the truth? A form which apes what you have done, and not what you say you will do and fail to on countless occasions?

Like graphite, you smear and break under the slightest pressure; driven to react because you lack the strength of will or character to force your desires on the wider universe. If nothing else, this new form will scribe your failure for all the world to see – your story laid out even as your face is driven down against the concrete and dragged until raw.

This is not some Olympiad, where the pure of heart and body compete against each other in feats of strength, endurance and mettle. I have no interest in being better than you, or proving explicitly something that is inherently implied by virtue of my continued status as your World Champion. Your attempt to graft some moral and ethically upstanding meaning to violence exchanged between two individuals for monetary recompense or kicks is as irrelevant as all your trite motivations. You are a walking E-Z-SPEAK of cliches and hyperbole:

You just want to be the best.

You have worked so hard for this.

You have always dreamed of this since the time you were a little girl–

None of that matters, and nobody is listening. Pack your tropes and your hackneyed justifications alongside those hopes and dreams and put them into long-term storage. You cannot help but define yourself with all manner of quirks and meaningless personality traits that contribute nothing of value. You are British, you are a Monarchist, you play in a band. You have a daughter with more developed emotional intelligence than her mother … Are any of these things supposed to relate to your fighting qualities? Am I supposed to consider you a worthy challenger because you think you are owed something at the fourth time of asking?

Your arguments are as riddled with inconsistency as your career to date. You do not consider me a threat in one breath, but you acknowledge the danger I pose in another. The depth of your vainglory is so bottomless that you cannot see out from the pit to take a moment to consider me in anything but your crudest, two-dimensional caricature. In all your increasingly frenetic and desperate attempts at self-justification, you have barely offered a coherent thought as to who I am and why I do any of this. It is so disappointing to see you throw away another opportunity for that much-needed personal growth, obsessively regaling an uninterested audience and wider world with all the reasons that mark you out as special.

There is nothing special about you, Kath-Lyn, save your talent for finding praise in the most lukewarm, pedestrian aspects of your otherwise meaningless life.

I have retired legends and defeated superheroes – am I supposed to be moved to something by your trials and tribulations with Child Protective Services? I am a boogeywoman incarnate, used by the company hierarchy to silence upstarts and whispered about by cawing hens around catering … Should I fear the Gem Stones and their delusional leader? Do you listen to the things you say?

Your cliches are worn out, alongside your welcome. The size of the dog in your allegory is irrelevant, and I will put it down alongside the rest of your metaphor.

The reality is that you are going to let your daughter down, Kath-Lyn, because your position as the rock upon which her entire world is based is merely a macrocosm, a terrarium sealed off from reality. A pocket universe that you must leave to come defeat me and when you do, you will be just another shining trinket amongst countless baubles. Robbed of your uniqueness and special nature. From your perspective so much potential sits unused, waiting to be converted into realised success, but this is not your story. It is mine. Inside the limits of your own mind, you are on some fairytale-esque single-track towards realising fame and glory but throw open that door and step through and you will quickly find my world does not look upon you with darling eyes, wide and awe-filled and proud.

I do not look up at you like your daughter Juliet does; proud and pleased and enthused. I look down and see no crowning jewel worthy of appreciation, only a naive young woman who believes herself ready to take from me what a child’s rainbow-coloured dreams empower to believe belong to her.

It is easier to obtain forgiveness for breaking promises than to cope with the aftermath of badly-made ones, and so I think it is best if you concentrate on making amends with your daughter for committing the former. Despite your assurances, I strongly recommend you bring a chair to the Michelob Ultra Arena. Bring whatever you think will best help bridge an otherwise impossible gap between where you think you are and the reality you will soon occupy. It will be such a long, tiring journey to make. Use it to rest a while along the way.

Bring Juliet, and I will teach her all the lessons that will serve her so well in the rest of her life – lessons you will not, cannot teach because you are so far along a yellow-brick road that the glittering spires of the Emerald City rise over the blooming meadow tops.

Bring all the precious gemstones you can find: topaz, ruby, emerald and of course, diamond. I will shatter every one and in their broken remnants, you will finally see the reality as it has always been.

You will not survive long enough to see the Rapture.



10
Supercard Archives / Re: MASQUE (c) v DIAMOND STEELE - WORLD TITLE
« on: October 21, 2022, 06:15:55 PM »
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XXI – Lady with the Lamp

[The Past – Forward Field Hospital, Southeast Nagorno-Karabakh, Central Caucasus]

 
The glow trades gentle places with the darkness – subtly exchanging the barest of detail, some hint of what’s ahead – in exchange for the substantiveness remaining secret. Faded lime tiles, once brilliant seacrest green, reveal their intermodal pattern painstakingly arranged by hand along the corridor floor over a hundred years ago. Deep gouges puncture their ceramic faces and ugly cracks thread hairline failure, but they still give the eyes something artisanal to watch as the feet follow.

Thick bundles of electrical cables hastily tied together run where the floor meets wall spaces; their multicoloured, rubberised casing fading to monochrome as the light in my hand leaves them behind. The bubble of light around me is diffuse, and it ebbs and wanes as doorways out to either side swallow more of it to light their ruined interiors. Still, the lamp in my hand lights the way and I follow it.

There is a misconception, made more real by errant war films and dramatisations, that field hospitals are alive to the groan and the moan of the agonised, the sick. The dying. That their pain reverberates around whatever blown-out shell is repurposed to house them in the name of expediency: some sickened choir singing low and weeping.

In reality, it is a place of utter silence. Powerful cocktails of tranquilisers and painkillers reduce the broken bodies in their cots to mewling and burbling. Depressing their breathing until each intake of breath is shallow and slight, the diaphragm hardly so much as trembling with the barest jerk. An all-consuming unconsciousness that almost robs the most automatic functions of life of their motivation to work at all.

The largest ward spreads out in front of me. I believe it used to be a ballroom of some sort, for long-term patients, carers and families to forget their anguishes and traumas when this building still functioned as a sanatorium half a century ago. There are remnants of its old life still clinging on in the shattered stumps of crystal-lined chandeliers above, or the last splinters of varnished oak panelling still anchored to the punched-plaster walls like spindly, creeping vines. A veined-marble floor that had presumably hosted a hundred waltzes and doodlebugs was all but hidden under a hundred plus narrow beds.

It is strange how even robbed of all its vitality, its sensation … How the consciousness that makes a person themselves still lingers, even when all but the most animalistic portions of the brain are suppressed and deactivated. It is both a curiosity of anaesthesiology and the Human Spirit that even under the intense medicating, the most slurred senses can still stir.

He senses me before I am within touching distance, but I am not sure how. It cannot be the light I am carrying – the wounds which saw him carried in here make sure he will never see another thing again. It cannot be the mere proximity of another person: the day staff minister to all the wounded several times a day, and he is surrounded by other casualties who can still communicate, to some extent …

… And yet it is always when I move through this space, in the early hours on a cold, frost-speckled morning. Expectantly, his left hand – still coated in the pulverised grey dust of atomised mortar from the brick wall that exploded and took his sight – trembles and then it tips over to lie palm up. His fingers splay wide open.

I pause over the bedspace, lowering myself down to kneel on the cool marble and setting my lamp down where it chases away the shadows underneath. That is what some of the other staff have taken to calling me. The Lady with the Lamp. Derogatory and sneered by some, said with hope and uplift in their hearts by others. A few prefer the aloofness of Doctor DeLune and regardless of what they think of me, that is the only name ever spoken to my face.

His fingers twitch again and he takes a long, rasping breath. Something wet gurgles at the base of his throat. Reaching into the folds of my coat I pull free a nondescript brown plastic bottle, twist the cap free and empty a half-dozen capsules into his trembling palm. He shifts subtly, in some sort of discomfort, until I gently close his fingers around the pills and he stops moving.

He will be dead by the time the sun comes up. So will a dozen others.

Retrieving my lamp, I climb back up to my feet and continue through the rows of beds. It is an unavoidable burden in a necessary evil. There are not enough resources for them all. Ultimately, those that cannot get back to their feet and get back into the fight are of no use. Not out here, where might is decided by how many rounds are still in your chamber, and how many bodies you still possess to soak up those wielded by your opponent. This is an internecine, brutal civil war. Brother against brother. Friend murdering friend over some ethnic or religious divergence.

I do not really care why they do it. Only that it produces those who are in need of medical expertise, and that is my requisite. My purpose and skill. And a necessary component of that is the ability to triage, to determine need and severity and prioritise accordingly.

To prioritise, to triage, one must judge. And so by day Doctor Abigayle DeLune treats and ministers and heals and by night, the Lady with the Lamp judges and makes the former’s task that much more achievable by sun-up.

An unavoidable burden in a necessary evil.

There are so many who should never have come to fight here. Idealistic young men and women drawn into an idea only to discover the horrifying, practical reality. Who died clutching ragged stumps and begging for their mothers. Others who have survived, but only at the cost of growing into something dark and terrible; a million miles from the righteousness they set out to instil in the wider world.

All too often, the world they sought out to change instead changed them. Poisoned them. Corrupted. Others, of course, are jackals. Drawn by murder and suffering to revel in it far from oversight or consequence. Unfortunately, they are the ones who rarely find themselves at the receiving end of my judgement.

They are generally too good at what they do to require a bed under my care.

With a jerk of my wrist I unlock the side door and push it open far enough to admit a single whip of plunging-cold wind. Crystals of ice spin and whirl on the updraft, until the warmth of the ward melts them out of sight. Outside through the mud-smeared, cracked glass snow falls in thick, ragged plumes from a storm-tossed sky. The old man sitting up in the bed next to me grunts, hand pressed against a stained bandage stretched across his chest and weeping a watery pink fluid. His milky eyes meet mine and he tries to speak, but all of the air he can muster in his crushed lungs only allow for wheezing and groaning.

Still, he looks at where my hand rests on the tarnished brass handle of the door and manages to nod. He understands what to do next. He should never have come here – caught up in the dreams of his past while what little was left of the future wheezed its last few inflamed gasps. Another mistake …

But so many who come to fight in places like this make mistakes like that. He is only relatively unfortunate in being made to pay for it by taking matters into his own hands.

They will come for this place in a few days, as the line pushes back. There will be some token effort to evacuate; to move the sick and the lame but in reality every vehicle capable of moving a warm body is better spent moving their equivalent weight in warm clothing, or ammunition, or food stores. Those that cannot walk out will die on their backs, because the enemy is no more willing to shoulder them as a burden than we were.

Perhaps in more refined times, in more understanding places, a place like a field hospital would be respected. Even spared the worst excesses of fighting, but this is not peer-on-peer. This is not honourable, or measured. Or regulated.

This is Brother versus Brother. War to the knife and the hilt. They will all kill each other, and I have no desire to be there when they do, or waste resources on those that will soon be joining them.

The distinctive thump of artillery makes those broken clumps of chandelier on the ceiling swing lazily, and a half dozen bodies jerk as something instinctual fights through their medically-induced comas to make them flinch.

It is strange how even robbed of all its vitality, its sensation … How the consciousness that makes a person themselves still lingers.


[The Rapture]
 

I have come upon a revelation, and it has been carried forth on a litany of all those who have tried and failed to put an end to me. A tapestry has been woven of the women – and men – that set out to interfere in my grand design, because every single one of them operated the same curiously group-borne delusion that they alone held some novel insight into what lay underneath my ceramic skin. For my part, I was too focused on destroying what had come before to see the lessons that were painstakingly threaded and weaved together: a new reality coalescing around the dreamscape I had put down without mercy.

Oh, I have spent so long dispersing hurricanes and vanquishing superheroes, that I had not stopped to ask myself a fundamental question. What now?

Amber Ryan is gone. Broken. Crippled. Perhaps she will eventually feel the need to hurt someone professionally again, and given her dubious connections in sin and sinful cities, I have no doubt the requisite medical fitness records or powerful drugs required to make pretending they are legitimate believable will appear without too much effort … But her legend is culled. Fire extinguished. It is over.

Even her so-called protégé, a young girl marked by a Black Thorn, has been silenced by the plastic stranglehold of painted thorns pressed between gnashing, bleeding lips. There will be no renaissance. It is over. Still, she was strong and by the terms of our agreement, she may yet be useful in what is to come. Her part in this, at least, is not yet through.

The husband of Miss Ryan, Mister Bane, is no longer World Champion and his usurper carries in him the capacity to remember a song I sing with such carefree enthusiasm. Mister Davison thinks he has moved on from the darkness which saw him put his hands on Mac’s wife, but after taking a personal interest in educating the new Champion on my own personal methodologies for crippling, there is still potential to sing it together. A duet would be wonderful.

At last, the Bane-Ryan hegemony is broken and its power distilled.

My Heroine, Miss Johnson, has personal matters to attend to – namely retiring her wife permanently, before she can cause through word of mouth and lack of deed even more agony for their family. Others have tried in that time, such as Miss Vargas, and they have acquitted themselves well enough in the miseries and choice suffering gifted between, but despite the unified desires of the wider company, that same curious group delusion, the Bombshells’ World Championship is still mine.

The heart of this company is still mine. Her heart is still mine.

What now?

The answer has been written in all of my most beautiful deeds, but it has taken until now and a refreshing moments’ pause to glance back and see what it has been waiting to tell me. It is no longer sufficient to simply smash those who crave glory against the rocks of the edifice I have built. It is no longer sufficient to use their own desire and hunger as a convenient mechanism to deliver them within reach of my most wonderful and painful lessons.

No. It is time to go to them. To wander into their ignominy – dark and cold – and bring forth light to see and fight by. The gold faceplate girt by dried red held above my head on sweat-stained, leather backing is my lamp and it will let them know that I am here.

A Bombshell with an Opportunity. A Lady with a Lamp.

And so there is no need to find a lure, a reason to attract my attention. The skills of a Siren are wasted when the target comes of their own accord, and in just over a week I will meet one in the form of Miss Steele. An extrovert by nickname and apparent nature; a broadcaster of noise and effect and a shining light for attracting attention. But it is a curious mix of circumstance that makes you the latest to attempt to pry this title from my cold, plastic fingers.

I think you are here because they have run out of any other names to suffer in your stead. After all, how odd to think that following such an absence and brief competitive return, you have earned the opportunity to become the World Champion so simply. What great competitors did you lay low to earn that right? Perhaps, more likely, you have simply earned the company hierarchy a little more time to consider their options as they desperately struggle to arrange something of heft and weight to act as a bulwark against me.

You must have seen what I have done to all the others, Kath-Lyn? Such a beautiful name. All those blue-haired, bright-eyed, enthusiastic newcomers and battle-hardened, elite veterans. Regardless of their motivations or achievements every single one of them has uniformly failed. Even where they have struck out some singular success – epitomised by Mercedes’ dogged resistance or Roxi’s victory – they were ultimately token examples of meaningless resistance. It was always inevitable.

Compared to such lofty names and vast merchandise-movers, what precisely do you bring that they did not? Is it another tired and two-dimensional assessment of who I am and why I do the things that I do? Will you wax ineffectual lyrical about why I hide my face, or what happened to my hand, or make agonisingly ham-fisted allegories relating to Halloween?

My greatest works are complete, and now I am tired of the chittering, mewling voices that chirp and warble at my feet for attention and succour. For a while I was content to leave them scrambling in ignorance, to step down on their weakling, pulsating forms when one occasionally coalesced into something sufficient to stand and be struck down. But now, I am tired.

I am weary of talking – specifically, the words of those who cannot deny what their eyes tell them but choose to do so anyway. That watch challenger after challenger wilt and buckle to their knees before my Rapture, and still profess it will end all too soon. I am so very tired of talking and so now, it is time to go to them and judge them. Find them wanting.

Let me see the shape of their fear by the light of the Championship – my Lamp – they covet so desperately. I want to see their face contort in the realisation that it was all some terrible, awful mistake. To realise in that singular moment that they should never have come here and should never have crossed me.


[The Past – Forward Field Hospital, Southeast Nagorno-Karabakh, Central Caucasus]

 
The first blow drew a red streak across the insulation blanket behind; the second broke something in her jaw. She dropped to the plating and a fist crashed into the bloodstain above, punching clean through and into the machine spaces. Lashing out with a snarl half-strangled by the mouthful of iron, the flat of her boot met a planted shin and won. His leg buckled and with a forearm still buried in the wall, his body stretched out supine and helpless. Abigayle tilted her aching head up and drove a fist hard into the wide eyes staring back down.
 
The insulation blanket crumbled, and he slumped down on top of her, unconscious. 
 
Abigayle spat clear her mouth. “Remove him.” 
 
With the weight lifted, she rolled onto her front and used the jagged hole in the wall to pull herself up to her knees, fingers cradling the swelling side of her face. The crowd looking down from above bounced their dislike against the metalwork, banging and shaking and raging against the barriers all around. She grabbed a handful of the shirt of the Medical Orderly pressed into service as a Referee – and the skin underneath – as he stooped to check on her opponent, pulling him in with a sharp tug.
 
“Being unconscious is as blissful as it is going to get for him. Do not be in such a rush to ruin that hard-earned rest.” Something hot and painful worked against her jaw with every word, trying to force it shut. “I think it is time to meet my fanbase.”
 
Her grip only got tighter and he nodded frantically, groping against the floor as best he could with one shoulder pinned back. She ripped it from his grasp as soon as it got close enough to snatch, sending him down the short distance to the floor with a hard shove. Her slick fingers left damp trails across tarnished metal as she ran her hands across the prize, bringing it close enough to breathe deep the stink of sweat ingrained into the cracked leather. 
 
Her prize. 
 
Struggling up to stand on burning, heavy legs, she held her free hand out to the side and beckoned with a finger back behind. 
 
Picking himself up from the floor with a grimace, the Referee took his cue and Abigayle thrust the old tinpot Championship title up opposite with her raised arm, letting the heavy faceplate flop over and clatter against her wrist. Individual insults about her parentage and the way she looked dissolved into a thoroughbred, powerful roar of disapproval. Her head swam. Dozens of bodies pressed against the barriers forming a circle of seething anger all around and above her head – but they were toothless. Tough on talk and weak where it counted, down here amongst broken jaws and the concussed unconscious. Their toughest man was gargling softly at Abigayle’s feet, pooling red spittle around her toecap.
 
She flung her head backwards and swept a tangled mess of platinum blonde hair out from her eyes. Then she gave them a look as arrogant as her swollen face would allow, drinking in the hot air and intensifying outrage. Some of them had bet heavy and lost hard tonight; others just craved the sight of her lying face down, warming the rest of the field hospital through conduction between her face and the superstructure. Those with the least about them – and the loudest voices – were probably a little of both. That just made it all the more satisfying. She won, they lost. Twice.
 
The baying crowd shrank back at the clang of her boot against the first rung of the ladder that led up from the old vehicle inspection pits. Above her head, distorted barriers relaxed into their housings as she climbed and the insults got less explicit and less directed now there might be the chance someone would have to pay for them. 
 
Abigayle was in no rush on the ascent, giving her heart and face a little while longer to recover from the adrenaline high and battering blows. By the time she hauled herself up over the lip, a wide path had split the crowd in two, reduced to murmurs and harsh whispering. She squeezed the thick leather between her fingers and let the metal plates bolted on skip and ring against the floorplates where they trailed. 
 
She forced the deadbolt back into its housing. It could only be opened from the inside, the second change she had made when it became obvious just how popular her time at the top of this impromptu fight club of sorts was turning out. The mesh door was bowed in at either side, squeezed like a fattened hourglass. Bent by years of thrusting hands trying to push their way far through enough to actuate the lock, get inside and even the odds in favour of the stupid bet they’d bet. 
 
The mesh gate swung open with the tip of her boot, spattered cherry red. It swung outward – the first change she had made. The distance down to the fighting floor below was just far enough that she didn’t relish the idea of being killed through strategic use of a door by someone just brave enough to charge her with a steel barrier in-between or surviving the fall but at the cost of having her chin potentially become an internal organ. 
 
The clatter of the Referee – or the man she’d taken ten years’ life expectancy from – starting their climb reverberated all around against the grimy machine spaces. Abigayle forced the gate shut with the flat of her foot and stepped forward. Some radiated their hate out, staring holes through her they could only wish to cut for real. Others didn’t have the strength of will or feel much like taking the risk of making eye contact. A few cupped their hands around snarling mouths, dispensing their expertise about why her sixty third successful consecutive so-called “title” defence was actually firm evidence of her impending defeat.
 
Just like twenty-seven. Or forty-nine. Or fifty six.
 
She pulled the leather through her grip until the big circular plate hung prominent and parallel to her bruised face. Most of the words on it, like the stylised engraving of two men boxing, were meaningless. It hadn’t been used to represent boxing competition in a long time. It was just some convenient physical avatar to identify who was hot to bet on or against, depending on how long they’d managed to keep the trinket their own.

Such were the paucity of distractions available in a warzone. 
 
One word meticulously scribed into the metal was still a reminder. All about the power and the attention. Stealing their attention, reminding them that she was all-powerful, and they were utterly powerless. Emblazoned on what had once been burnished gold, scratched and pockmarked by dents and bulges; deep shadows cast across its face by dirt ingrained into the etched shapes and lines.
 
Champion. That still meant something. It was the only real agreement that stood wordlessly between Abigayle and the crowd of colleagues, patients and anyone else fit enough to drag themselves across the frozen compound and into the mechanical repair shops where people who should know much better hurt each other for bartership, money and fun. They were all in violent agreement about what it stood for and what it meant, if less united on who held it with a matching sneer. 
 
The pain in her jaw fought and lost with the release flooding through her waking mind. Trembling legs firmed up. She raised her free hand in the air, nostrils flaring at the waft of engine lubricant and sweat. Hers, theirs – it didn’t matter. She could see flecks of old paint spinning and twisting in the light of the overhead strips. The spectators quietened enough for the sounds of a worn-out generator to permeate through; screeches and groans generated by pressure differentials; tuneless melodies belted out through variations in the high-voltage power gear.
 
Abigayle dropped the dented title belt onto the floor with a clatter and kicked it out into the gap that split the crowd, adding a few more scratches. “Any other challengers?”   
 
A fat head on broad shoulders pushed out from the throng, knuckles tight. He bulged in some of the right places and most of the wrong; a physique turned to fat through too much sunlight, protein, steroids or not enough. She couldn’t pluck a name to match the face, mostly hidden by swollen jowls. Not that it mattered. He opened his fat mouth to say something she did not want to hear.
 
Her fist slammed into his cheek, swallowed up for a fraction of a second by the thick blanket of padding skin. It kept going until crushed muscle came up against bone, making his head snap back and those balled fists relax. 
 
Glassy eyes stared off into the snow somewhere outside the workshops as his chin dropped back down, a trickle of blood slipping out from between slack lips. Accepting they wouldn’t see a final twist to their liking, arms reached out from the crowd and hooked themselves around her stalled challenger. He sank into their grasp, dead weight. 
 
Abigayle stepped forwards, arm cradling her gut to stifle an ache as she retrieved her meaningless belt. Sixty-four.


[The Rapture]
 

I can see, Miss Steele, that you pin great importance on dynasty; on tradition and longstanding security. Perhaps it is ingrained into your being given where you have come from, on the distant shores of the United Kingdom, but even so institutionalised there is no legacy that can last for all time. Everything eventually succumbs to disorder and entropy. As your middle-name namesake, Elizabeth, has proven, seventy years after the fact.

You have left behind the death of one monarch only to return to SCW and see the coronation of a new one. As this reign gets underway, I am moved to grant you something of a privilege that I seldom extend to those who wish to do me or my grand design harm. I am willing to help you, Kath-Lyn.

It is obvious that you are not ready to leave the purple velvet-lined, gold-gilt past behind. Memories of the Old Country and everything it stood for. Your Nan … All relics of a past that are hopelessly out of touch and out of sight. None of those things can help you, and the sooner you disabuse yourself of the idea they can, the better placed you will be to grow.

I will help you grow. To do so, there must be a catalyst. Something which can expedite your transformation and there is no better agent of change than pain. It forces action, prevents the status-quo from becoming all-consuming. One cannot truly stagnate if they hurt, and through that purity of purpose, I will ensure that you leave Las Vegas with something of value even if it not what you think you want.

You wanted something special to mark High Stakes – something memorable to act as vigil for the loss of someone so instrumental in your life, even though they cannot possibly have ever known you, or even had any reason to care to. I will do as you ask, and I will make you that memorial you so crave. In Las Vegas, I will transform you into a shining effigy of the bygone era you crave so badly, that you earn to see immortalised. You will be fashioned into something that will stand as a testament to the end of what has come before, and a marker of what follows.

I have been looking for someone to help me usher in such a new era. Someone so utterly divorced from reality that they believe anything except annihilation awaits them in the City of Sin, one week from tomorrow. Look at this tapestry, at the names woven into its threads and fibres, and see the shape of the doom that waits. You are not the first or the last, but you are different. Your sacrifice does not further my plans, or bring me some sick personal satisfaction. Instead it gives you the judgement you have been seeking – external validation that has been achingly absent.

Why else would you have subjected us to the self-flagellation seen at Violent Conduct? While you were talking, as you are prone to do given any opportunity, I put a superhero down and took the heart of this division as my own. Since then, they have come and failed and come again and in that time I have only become more practised and more effective in the subtle art of ending dreams. Legacies. Dynasties.

You ache for some third party to validate you. Whether it is drinking with the boss backstage over your mutual love of an irrelevant constitutional monarchy, or dispensing your so-called wisdom between ringropes to those with more poise and grace than you can bring yourself to admit you lack … There is a consistent, burning need to be recognised.

But recognition alone will not bring you glory. It will only bring you heartache. Oh, Kath-Lyn, you have spent so very long shouting for recognition that you have not stopped to think about the consequences of being granted that fervent wish. The light of attention rarely comes soft and diffuse, and at High Stakes it will blind you utterly.

You measure yourself against the pitiful women you overcame to earn your destruction at my thorn-painted hand: Marlowe, Lukas and Krystal. They are nothing. No datum to measure worthiness against, and certainly no exemplar to underline your so-called credentials. It is only more evidence that for your mutual love of Her Majesty, Mister Ward has little reserved exclusively for you.

What else explains the exceptionally low bar for entry into my domain? You are not the first loudhailer to be expedited into conflict with me by those who seek  timely resolutions to irritating, recurring problems. More than one plucky, rinse-haired challenger has demanded opportunity and come face-to-pseudo-face with a reality they cannot handle.

I hope you are ready for the consequence that comes with the opportunity you so desperately crave.

And in the end, it cannot possibly be worth it. After all, how many times have you had the chance to establish your own legacy? To produce something of value that could truly stand apart and alone? Be remembered? Your fourth Bombshells’ World Championship opportunity ends the same way as the first three … In failure. In inadequacy. In shame, but offers a new beginning. One in which you will finally be freed of the delusions and illusions that have conspired to make you think you should be somewhere you are simply not good enough to be. Is that not refreshing? To be liberated from ideas that are wholly unrepresentative of your station?

Welcome to the Rapture. God Save The Queen, because he cannot save you.


[The Present -Lorenzi Park, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA]


I do not need four years of college education, seven years of medical school and five further in clinical practice to assess that she is struggling to contain her emotional response. That in turn suggests a similar struggle to contain the accompanying physical one.

“How much fucking longer is this going to take?”

For all her faults, Miss Blackthorn has a wonderful purity of point that makes her significantly less tiresome to deal with than her now-retired mentor. Perhaps the latter developed her long, drawn-out desire to occupy every conceivable advantage in anything – conversation or fist fight – through the same mistakes and errors of judgement that make Avalon much less willing to resist her first impulse response long enough to let it inform her second.

They are not the same, of course. Given the way their original partnership ended, it is apparent even Amber knew a lost cause when she suffered through one.

Still, it makes for more interesting conversation. I tip my masked face over from across the pathway. “This is not a lesson.”

She blinks, arms still folded loosely over her chest but eyes narrowed. Back straightened from the slouch against the lamppost. “Why are we even here then? Isn’t this where you drop some fourth-dimensional, galaxy-brain-sized mindfuck that has me questioning my own sanity?”

Slipping my foot free from a sandal, I let the damp grass twist between my toes. The exposed skin around the short sleeves of my dress prickles as the temperature drops and a breeze picks up. I think it might rain.

“I am not playing games, Miss Blackthorn,” I offer. She scoffs.

“You’re always playing games. Maybe just not sure if you ever finish the same one you start.”

I laugh, sing-song and she flinches at the lilt of it, levering herself forward. “It’s taking everything I’ve got not to–”

“You are here because you could not deliver what you talked about doing,” I interrupt. The plastic fingers of my prosthetic whirl as the wrist rotates in a biologically impossible three hundred and sixty degrees of motion. “If you had not interfered, none of this would have come to pass.”

Avalon snarls, turning away with disgust writ large all across her youthful features. “Expect me to believe that? After what you pulled on Climax Control a few weeks ago? With that kiss …”

“Do you truly believe I could have engineered that?” I ask, allowing open incredulity to seep into my voice in torrents. “All of those things were because you were determined to make the same mistakes she did, but make them yours. And you did. Although she should be thanking you.”

“Why’s that?” Avalon mutters, chewing on the inside of her lip as she counts the blades of grass at the feet of her converses.

“Because if you had not insisted on facing me regardless of the price Amber paid to prevent it, then it would have given her some comfort in rationalisation and justification. As it was, you did what you wanted to do, not what you should do, and made it superfluous.”

Brushing a lock of hair back behind her ear, the young woman fixed me with a stare fuelled with the disdain of someone ten years more senior in bitterness and anger. “You’re a real cunt. I hope Katie Steele takes it all from you.”

Standing, slipping my other foot free and making the short distance barefoot, I cross to Avalon just as she pushes forward to meet me as far forward as she can manage. Not a hint of doubt stares back at me. “I have one question, and then you may go.”

Another scoff, “How generous of you, Ma’am.”

I stand in silence, head cocked to the side until eventually, she relents. “Yeah?”

“Do you think she will?”

A frown. “Do I think who’ll what?”

“Do you think Miss Steele will?”

Another few seconds of nothing, and the wind picks up to rustle the branches overhead. Copper and oxide-coloured leaves twirl and flutter as they rain down.

“No,” She replies after a long while. “Think she’ll go down like all the rest.”

“Why?”

Avalon chews on her lip for a moment, eyes still locked on mine. “Because they never take you seriously until you’ve got that Fisher-Price Chokemaster 5000 rammed down their soft palette, making them eat their own words. Literally.”

She swallows, and I think she is remembering how it feels, but shows no other outward sign. It is obvious she does not regret her actions, only that they did not lead to the desired conclusion. I suspect significant satisfaction was still gleaned from repeatedly introducing my body to a variety of steel-reinforced objects, however.

“Thank you,” and I nod. She doesn’t bother with a parting insult. Simply turning on her heels and making her way back up the winding path. She does not like these meetings, because she cannot piece together my angle. My strategy. After all, why would I have made such a stipulation, to make her my protégé in our match weeks before, if there was not some intricate plot carefully laid out to ensnare and redirect her?

Miss Blackthorn will never find that angle, because it does not exist. There is no plan. I am simply taking a page out of her mentor’s dog-eared, bloodstained playbook. I am living in the moment.

I call out after her. “Next week, I want you to tell me something.”

She stops, but does not look back.

“I want to know why you went to prison.”

Her shoulders square, fingers curling tight to make fists. For a few moments, I think she might simply turn around and tell me something distinctly different with her hands. Instead, she draws in a deep breath and holds it to burn through the gas exchange process inside her lungs. Eventually, her body relaxes.

And then she continues on. What a curious young lady. If only there had been more time, I might have been able to …

Perhaps there is still time. Perhaps I will make the time.


 

11
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XX – Survivor Bias

[The Past – Indira Gandhi Arena, New Delhi, India]

 
Cartilage cracks under the force of my heel as it drives in hard against her throat. What little air is left in my lungs is forced out as I crash down against the mat, but I can always take another breath when the pain subsides and my diaphragm once again accepts the ever-more urgent pleas of my autonomic nervous system for urgent, life-sustaining oxygen. For the Bombshells’ World Champion, the fractured mass of her twisted larynx collapses in on itself and she gurgles and bubbles foaming pink froth that spills over blood-flecked, slack lips.
 
Powered inch-by-inch with every rasping, agonising lungful of air I drag myself across until I can fall over her jerking body and spend a few moments watching the blinding halo of the overhead spotlights high up in the rafters spin and cavort as they circle me. I do not hear the nearby Official and I do not hear a bell but I hear the crowd react.
 
A boiling, swelling torrent of rage that expands logarithmically until it is concussive – almost strong enough to physically assault me as I feel a superhero quiver and shake underneath me. It takes virtually all the strength left in my lactic-poisoned arms to push me over and up onto my knees. Thick ropes of red twist and drip in long, drawn-out spindles pooling down from the exposed edge of my chin, where the reinforced composite porcelain has been shattered and broken off by the careful attention of the Bombshells’ World Champion, Miss Roxi Johnson.
 
Former Bombshells’ World Champion. It is mine now. It is me.
 
The Official hesitantly reaches out with an outstretched arm, off-balance and leaning forward, the weight of the title belt threatening to send him toppling into a place that only fools rush toward. Running out of courage despite the fact I am struggling to lift the shattered remains of my pseudo-face up from the red-splattered mat, he throws the Championship the last metre down and it lands in the blood and the sweat.
 
Those dancing overhead lights pick out the shining gold of the centre plate. With another constrained breath, rib cage pulled in taut with iron bands forged from bruises, I reach out with my prosthetic and drag the heavy leather strap in. The delicate, painted black thorn work which once spiralled around its bone-white plastic fingers are gouged and scratched, and the servomotors within judder and spasm with effort …
 
But it is mine.
 
I have captured her heart, at last.
 
Shards of broken glass spin away as I lift the metal and leather up into my grasp. Such a curious thing – for so many to have given so much for something that seems so tired, so banal. The leather is dried and cracked, made shiny in places and rough where the oil from dozens of worthy and unworthy hands had held tight until it was finally ripped from their desperate grasp. Where it flexes the backing peaks through in splits and slits, and the polished plated gold is worn away at the edges where years of the uncaring attentions of airport baggage handlers, interspersed with the odd exposed forehead driven into edge-on, have combined to strip away the finish and leave the bare silver underneath.
 
And still, so many have given so much. Given everything. Still on my knees, I glance over my shoulder at the murmuring form of the woman I have just taken it from. A Superhero who has just given everything to stop what is happening right before her glassy eyes.
 
I would be lying to say the sight of realisation making its dogged, determined way into her addled and oxygen-starved brain did not thrill me. It did. It does.
 
For a few moments, I think I can almost understand why this title is such a toxic attraction. A shining, cancerous trinket and trophy that hollows out the bones of all those who spend too long in its poisoned presence. But those are only a few moments, because I have taken this, made it mine, for a subtly different reason.
 
Others have simply survived this Championship, but I have set my sights on an altogether loftier purpose. It will be reforged. Remade.
 
It will not change me. I will change it.
 
Even though they are so very high above – too high to warm my sweat-slicked skin – I feel the heat of the overhead lights, and it spreads across my shoulders as it heralds the comingl of something long-promised.
 
The Rapture has finally arrived, borne on the winds of a hurricane and the cape of a superhero.

 
[The Rapture]
 
There is little to be gleaned from those wounds most obviously on display. The angry red welts and criss-crossed scars that mar the skin have already told their stories; they have nothing more to say beyond announcing their presence. The pain they carried has already been inflicted – spent in the past and with limited potential to influence the future beyond limiting the scope of Instagram-worthy pictures.
 
Instead, it is far more illuminating to consider those injuries which are hidden from view. The wounds that did not make it back to the eye of the beholder to be judged and grimaced against. Their stories are still in-progress; still to be understood. Quantified. Their impact has yet to be fully felt. A slow-motion metaphysical car crash in which the occupant is still in mid-agonising whiplash.
 
Thoughts turn to those that were overwhelmed and never returned to show their cowed faces. And there are so many faces: Miss Benton, Miss De Salco, Miss Rainbow … A Zdunich by every other name under the Sun and Moon …
 
Inconspicuous by their absence, because they were never a meaningful challenge or threat. Obstacles to be negotiated in order to move forward, but nothing more. That they failed to reappear, to learn and adapt, is simply reflective of their irrelevance. Perhaps it was for the best, given the likelihood of a repeat performance. There can be no growth without suffering, but misery for the sake of misery is sadomasochistic. A twisted form of pleasure for some, perhaps.
 
Then, there are those who did profess to have something new to offer. Our former Bombshells’ World Champion, Miss Johnson, is one such rare example. Indeed, she can hold the impressive – if purely academic – claim to have been the only individual to inflict a so-called defeat upon me … Though as I hold her title between my plastic fingers, such a claim seems hollow at best.
 
Still, she returned with something approximating growth. Development. A new challenge to be negotiated and overcome. The cuts still healing in subtle pink lines on her belly carry testament to that attempt, ultimately for nought. Those are not the scars, however, that tell the most interesting story.
 
The reality of her defeat, of her vulnerability, leaves twisted track marks all across the inside of her mind. Psychosomatic wounds that pulse and ache with pain; reminding her that in the end she could not save any of them. Not her wife, not her title and not the Division which now looks up on craned necks to see me standing at its summit. Agonies of the spirit she will carry for a great many years, completely and utterly invisible. Those lingering aftereffects are the most intriguing.
 
And so … What of those that do not seem to carry any such wounds of the soul, but choose to reappear? How best to understand where they clamp a hand to their side and grimace with some unseen, unknowable pain?
 
Where does Mercedes Vargas hurt?
 
It is a subtle wound she wears and it is inexorably wrapped up in the curvature of her spine, brought on by the enormous weight she apparently carries. The combined mass of the entire Bombshell Division, singularly placed on her back as she continues to demonstrate without exception her talents and credentials, would force almost any other contender to her knee to scrape bloodily against concrete, but Miss Vargas is made of sterner stuff.
 
Louder stuff.
 
Look through the noise, however, and back into the past. Beyond her victory fresh from the fallout of Violent Conduct, further back to the Climax Control of previous weeks. There, she faced off against a superhero and failed to achieve the victory she so desperately yearned for. Strove for. This is not a particularly hard indictment of her inadequacies – after all, I did not succeed at the first attempt when dealing with superhuman Champions and to expect others to have done so would be purely hypocritical.
 
But we are not the same.
 
There is a desperation to Miss Vargas that pours red and thick to clot on the ground as plainly as the wounds she keeps hidden from view. A growing and ever-more urgent need to take by force what has so far been refused voluntarily; recognition. Respect. Appreciation. Her due.
 
We are not the same, and yet both of us are inexorably linked. For while Roxi was the first to defeat me, per se, Mercedes was the first to survive me. No-one – not SCW’s resident Saviour in a flowing cape, not a Hurricane Painted Red – has remained standing after a mutual exchange of miseries with my thorn-painted hand. No-one, except Miss Vargas.
 
No-one has stood under their own power to look at me and signal without ambiguity or hesitation, that this was not and is not over. Except Miss Vargas.
 
When I was deployed as this company’s resident boogeywoman; used to scare impressionable young women and children into compliance, she sought out confrontation with abandon. That alone is worthy of her much-thirsted recognition and appreciation. It is so much easier when they come out from the wings willingly, and step into the light to share centre-stage of their own free but vastly-misjudged appetite for success.
 
But I am not interested in what I can see in Mercedes; only what I cannot.
 
It is said that in the penultimate stages of the Second World War, aerospace engineers studied the damage patterns of aircraft that returned from bombing missions over mainland Europe; seeking to understand where the design could be strengthened based on that visible damage and distress and the obvious wounds of war.
 
It was not until a relatively maverick engineer suggested  what was of interest was less the visible and more the invisible. In other words, the areas without damage were those most vulnerable areas, and those that suffered impacts there simply did not survive to return at all. To consider only the assets which made it back created an implied Survivor Bias which did not represent reality.
 
And so, it is here we must be cautious to ascribe too much heroism, skill and wonder to Miss Vargas simply for the feat of having returned on a second occasion. Where has she been shot through by heavy flak, and does that represent a significant wound or something altogether more cosmetic?
 
Her weakness is not in defeat against the previous Champion all those weeks ago, or even those failures previous to that. No, her vulnerability is in the reaction to that defeat – a powerful need to make amends, to prove she is still capable of achieving great things despite such setbacks. That desire can make a person do foolish things at foolish times, and act with a reckless abandon usually reserved for fools chased by their hapless angels. I am not interested in what Mercedes has failed to do previously; I am intrigued by what she might do in her attempt to redress that failure.
 
What secret wounds lie out of sight, representing mortal blows if only they puncture her thin and stressed skin, sending her tumbling out of the sky trailing thick smoke and flickering flames? We know such miseries have yet to be inflicted upon her, because she stands here. Now. The scars and the aches and the pains are an inconvenience, but hardly fatal.
 
Not now. Not yet.

 
[The Past ERROR]
 
Counter-fire barriers flared into existence, disintegrating the incoming rounds which hit their mark with a swirling detonation so bright it momentarily reduced the surrounding block to a silhouette. The rounds aimed too high exploded chunks of brittle concrete, sending plumes of pulverised masonry up into the air as they collapsed. A pall of choking dust settled over anything and everything below, making it difficult to see, shoot or think. 
 
Undeterred, the deafening crack-crack-crack of a rifle on automatic rang out. Even through the gloom, the unmistakable pattern of light which marked out every hit stopped in its tracks was easily visible, and simply attracted more. Something heavier joined the mix, slower and more deliberate with a bass-like thud as it fired and a billowing sheet of orange flame as it hit. A rolling wind swept out from the impact, bathing the ruins in warmth.
 
It emerged from the afterglow, striding over scorched earth and through the blackened, broken fragments of metal still-burning in the aftermath. Pitted and scratched and still coming. 
 
Shuffling out of sight and into cover, Abigayle pressed her back up against the remnants of a brick wall and stooped down to keep her skull on top of her shoulders where it belonged. Swiftly changing out the magazine, she cycled the rifle once, twice – three times before the battered action overcame the grime and sludge and loaded a round into the chamber. Smearing a grit and mortar aerosol from her features, she pressed the weapon’s stock in against the meat of her shoulder and made to swing around.
 
The wall, now in front, which should have given her the perfect firing position broke apart, shattered by the penetrating power of a hyper-velocity round that could only have come from her own side. The splintering brickwork gave Abigayle just enough time to squeeze her eyes shut. 
 
Dumped on her belly hard, she ground her bloody forearms into the dirt; desperately trying to lift her chest up high enough to relieve the crushing pressure and breathe. Air finally came in hacking, spluttering gasps as her diaphragm jerked back to work. Rolling onto her side, she cradled her ribs and wretched.
 
Abigayle roughly pawed at her ears, grimacing as something hot and slick wet the fingers. Leaving a red streak smeared across her body armour, she reached ahead towards the muzzle of her rifle, protruding from a pile of blasted brick and rock. As she tugged weakly on the still-warm barrel her bloody grip slipped free, staining the metal. 
 
The pale sun in the sky, still struggling to push through the thick blanket of dust and debris suspended in the chill air was blotted out completely. A localised shadow fell over her, the sound of gunfire and her own wheezing replaced by a ringing that swamped out every sound. This great armoured machine, rumbling and shining even through all the dirt and din of battle, looked down on her without any discernible face other than an elongated muzzle. It rolled to a halt, poised to deliver a killing blow with the deadly weapon mounted on its front but the point of the barrel never found her. Instead, it simply rolled over\Abigayle’s prone form, saved by crushed girders and breezeblocks jutting overhead and continued elsewhere. 
 
Gritting her teeth together and fuelled by something equal parts anger, disbelief and tinnitus she scrambled to her knees. With a single whole-body effort she heaved her rifle free of its burial mound and back into her grasp. Abigayle lurched up to her feet, ignoring the taste of iron on her tongue as she stumbled after it, released the safety and squeezed the trigger hard.
 
The first few rounds dug into the ash-strewn dirt, too low and missing their mark by ten feet or more but as they came thick and fast, the brutal recoil kicked the muzzle upwards bringing the rest of the magazine on target. Metal slugs crashed into a familiar, dazzling wall of detonations conjured out of thin air; each impact spreading waves of kinetic energy that radiated out across twisting, seething bands. Dozens of rounds skimmed across an expanding plume of fire, no more effective than stones against water.   
 
The defensive kaleidoscope became a lighthouse; shining so brightly that any surrounding “ship”, and its gun, could see and respond. Withering fire began to coordinate and grow exponentially, a mixture of handguns, rifles and siege-grade weaponry. Missiles and grenades slammed themselves into the counter-fire barrier, competing for space in air already thick with metal. Opaque with the density of the attack, the siege machine beyond the shielding was impossible to see, but it was soon felt. 
 
The beam swept out in an irresistible arc, electric blue and scintillating. It burnt the air itself before it burnt the ground – slicing through concrete, iron, armour, flesh and bone in a continuous emission that disappeared to kill further than Abigayle could see. Methodically the armoured vehicle turned, cutting and vaporising. She watched it boil brickwork into molten slag, and then she watched it sweep towards her–
 
Abigayle’s eyes snapped open as she sat bolt upright, consciousness lagging a few moments behind her heart as it wrenched and twisted inside her chest. Struggling to catch her breath, she ran a shaking hand across her damp, scarred scalp down to rest on the nape of her neck. Overhead, a single irritating strobe light flashed rhythmically. Throwing out a hand, she slammed it down on the nearby panel, silencing the tactile alarml and once again plunged the room into merciful darkness.
 
It had been designed to operate silently; using a pattern of light instead of noise to avoid the worst unpleasantness associated with triggers like shrieking, wailing, crying …
 
Sighing, she grimaced and peeled the sweat-stained sheets away, flinging them over the side of the bed. Pressing the bare soles of her feet down against the carpet, she buried her head in her hands. The warmth of her breath against her palms in the blackness went some way to steadying strained nerves. 
 
By feel alone and patting from the mattress to the nightstand, Kino’s fingers closed around a wide silver bracelet, clamshell-shaped and smooth to the touch. She snapped it closed around her wrist, snug against the flesh. A panel inset into the top of the bracelet lit up in response, and she dismissed its blue light with a tap of her fingertip against the metal. From a hook on the wall Abigayle pulled free a dressing gown that had evidently been bright red once when new, its intricate and embroidered flower-petal shapes faded by time and too many hot washes.
 
Throwing it on and rubbing at her face with the hilt of her palm, she made hard work of trudging to the nearby sink. Shoving her hands underneath the tap automatically brought warm water, and a much less welcome piercing light over the mirror. Screwing her eyes shut, she splashed the water against her face and let it run freely down to join the sweat stains on her vest. 
 
Scooping a palmful into her mouth, Abigayle glanced at the mirror. Her reflection looked terrible, successfully managing to make her appear almost as bad as she felt. She stretched the skin of her cheeks downward, temporarily smoothing out the creases. Pulling her hands away they snapped back into being; re-joining the experiences and the years that had created them. That no smoothing could remove. 
 
The bracelet on her wrist began to vibrate furiously. Patting a towel across her forehead, Abigaye flicked open the lock on her apartment’s door.   
 
They had said her hearing would return soon, given treatment. Given time. Until then, she experienced the world with her eyes and the occasional painful stab of tinnitus.
 
The man stood outside in the spinal corridor was dressed in an impeccably starched shirt, blue like the sky and sporting creases from epaulette to short-sleeve cuff. She instantly recognised the coloured beret on his head – scarlet red – that marked him out as a member of the local security services, and the razor-sharp creases which always followed a veteran’s wardrobe wherever they went. Abigayle frowned as she watched the guard talk, or at least, watched his lips move wordlessly. Her confusion encouraged his and he stopped, awkwardly over-enunciating as though that would make any difference.
 
Realisation dawned and holding her hand up to stop him, she darted back to the nightstand by an embarrassingly unkempt bed. Snatching up a small black orb, she pushed the device inside the inner concave of her ear and held it there for a few moments. A single muted tone conducted directly into her brain brought all the sounds of the world flooding back.
 
Abigayle tapped the side of her head by way of explanation. “I am sorry; you were saying?”
 
“Sorry for the early hour Ma’am.” He dipped his chin sharply and rocked up on the heels of his polished shoes. “There’s been an incident down at one of the camps. They’re looking for any and all able hands— “
 
“Internal or external?” She interrupted, already swooping down to collect her boots.
 
“Internal; ruckus broke out in the food lines and grew from there. For now at least, but that could change at any minute. I thought you might be able to help, given you can still … Well, see well enough. And your hand …”
 
The new prosthetic she wore glinted in the corridor light, fingers flexing in autonomic response.
 
She tried not to look at it, knotting the laces. “Take me to them.”
 
He hesitated. “Don’t you want to finish getting dressed?”
 
“That depends,” Abigayle said. Her words suggested there might be a little hesitation, but her tone didn’t ask for any suggestions. “Do they have the time to spare me?”
 
She fell in behind as he turned and left, silently.

 
[The Rapture]
 
There has been such a change – I hope you can feel it as strongly as I do.
 
It is the beginning of something wonderful, something I have worked so hard to show you all for so long. It is not a continuation of the old, whereby excellence was defined as a counter which ticked up on each successful defence of a symbol that long since stopped representing anything greater than the selfish, individualistic machinations of an army of one.
 
No, this is the culmination of a grand and celestial work carefully and painstakingly assembled from all the myriad parts taken from the Bombshells’ Division. Some willingly, as they gave me their careers and others at the greatest resistance; as I took their hearts. Through submission or subjugation, however, their contributions have finally ushered in something rapturous.
 
The summit of this Division and the wider company is no longer brutal, hierarchical combat. It is altogether more transformational. It is no longer necessary to simply survive and in that, outlive all your competitors. Now is the time for growth, to revel in the miseries and agonies that go hand-in-plastic hand with that self-actualisation and realisation. To become better, one must endure hardship.
 
Thus, as World Champion, my remit is no longer simply to defeat those that oppose me, but to educate them. Improve them.
 
Grow them.
 
And so through all the smoke and screeching treads and booming guns, Miss Vargas becomes my newest student. Not to learn about why she should never have come here, again, but instead the first of many to learn such very important lessons. Lessons which will leave her nursing wounds both visible and hidden but equally choice and measured out.
 
It is not enough to survive, Mercedes. Your singular claim to fame – of simply enduring me to be able to emerge from the other side still standing and drawing breath to tell the world how wonderfully you performed – is insufficient. At Climax Control, this Sunday, you will be placed into the same situation which saw you fail to grow, fail to learn and fail to achieve more than simply continuing to exist from one moment until the next.
 
There are no more unknowns by which learned aerospace engineers can frown and look at the punctured fuselage of your achievements and wonder: how can we make this better? The bias is fully understood and clear. Survival is no pre-qualification to take what I have worked so relentlessly to finally, blessedly make mine.
 
I am your Bombshells’ World Champion, and while I am your future, you are nothing but the past. A flawed, biased dataset which hides the truth from those who would step into the centre-stage light and take the beautiful lessons I have come wearing gold and precious stones to teach.
 
Last time, you survived to win. This time it will not be sufficient. There will be nothing left to look upon the holes and the scars and wonder how to make better, make stronger next time.
 
Welcome to the Rapture. It welcomes return guests.

 
[The Past ERROR]
 
The rain, spat by a furious sky, probed every inch of brick and metalwork on its determined way down to the ground. Where it could, water gathered in swollen rivulets which poured through the torn walls and shattered ceilings it met. Occasional claps of thunder reverberated against these burnt-out, broken shards – competing with the terrific, rolling boom of something else falling from the storm raging above. Something not made there. 
 
Wind whipped against the buckled frame of a window long abandoned by glass, pushing the storm and its ire inside. Other than a pockmarked concrete floor, lined with spiralling cracks and the occasional tile balanced precariously on a fire-blackened, sagging beam overhead there was nothing left for the weather to wreak havoc upon. Even the shattered panes, left where they’d tumbled and broken were further pummelled into fine shards by the elements and washed away; carried by an urban waterfall cascading down from the ruined levels above. 
 
Something that didn’t belong in the sky roared again. Painful, if anyone had been there to hear it and wince. It was close now, shaking the air and buoying the wind with newfound strength. What little that was still left standing shuddered, and more of it fell in on itself. Great chunks of concrete worn smooth by storms and scorched by fire toppled, punching ugly wounds in the floor where it found a way through and down. 
 
Eventually, calm re-established itself and the downpour resumed as the only sound piercing a silent cityscape. 
 
Pooling water had barely recharged ruts scored into the concrete floor before a body stumbling forwards and emptied them, falling hard. With a grunt and excruciating slowness made from pain in every body part, the figure rolled onto its back and blinked away the rain. She laughed.
 
The laughter was strained, interrupted by the occasional splutter and a sharp intake of pained breath. Pulling away the hand clamped against her side, she held up trembling fingertips that stained the falling rain red. Laughter gave way to the roar of the storm outside and in. 
 
The stranger groped about with no coordination, pawing against the pitted concrete randomly until fingers closed around the muzzle guard of a long-barrelled rifle. Drawing the weapon into her body, teeth grinding together with effort, she pulled free the magazine and glanced inside. Six shots shy. 
 
Clutching her gut, the rifle was soon forgotten as a wave of pain reduced the storm, the ruins, the six rounds – everything – to intolerable white noise. A bloodied glove lunged out, sending up grey rainwater and debris as it crashed about in search of something. Closing a fist tight around a soaked fabric bag marked DE LUNE she jerked on the strap, pulled it in and began rifling through. Weatherproof sheeting and dented tins were each flung away until a single grey cylinder rolled free from the confines of the bag, no larger than a finger. Breathing became a more deliberate effort, actions less coordinated with each passing second as she scraped it across the floor roughly, making hard work of tearing off the plastic protecting a tapered end. When it finally sheared, she twisted the cap until a sharp slither poked free.
 
Biting firmly down on her lip, DeLune plunged the point into a crimson-soaked undershirt. Her screams fought the storm still raging and won. 
 
Strings of saliva splattered out across her bloodied chin, joining jaw to the concrete before euphoria flooded her system and gave her just enough presence of mind to wipe them away with an unsteady hand. Slowly she climbed to her knees, rifle in hand as she paused for the luxury of a few relatively pain-free breaths. Shuffling forwards with knuckles pressed into the rainwater, DeLune gradually stretched out as she neared the blasted remains of a window frame until her soaking body lay prone. Parallel with a crumbling ledge, the muzzle of a rifle extended out and down into the wind and weather. 
 
Glancing over a shoulder, her eyes lingered on the red streak painting a short journey to the window’s edge. She sucked in a deep lungful of air as the pharmaceutical high began to fade. It would only continue to diminish. She shifted focus to the scope mounted on top of the rifle and the streets below.
 
It didn’t take long for her gaze to find its mark. Even if the storm and the furious skies sustaining it both departed, those things never made a sound. There were absolute silences that spoke more loudly than them, and in any case of all the senses, only the eye could see something so unnatural.
 
Elegance in such devastated surroundings was unmistakably out of place; something shining cerulean in a washed-out city of black and grey. Reaching forward, DeLune twisted a focusing ring and narrowed the scope’s field of view. She watched it move effortlessly through the destruction below and, bizarrely, with deliberate care which only seemed even more jarring considering the entire city had been shattered with much less hesitancy. Such deliberate gentleness, as though clipping the melted remains of any of the smoking hulks scattered around down below would upset someone. Their owners were long dead by now.
 
It stood easily twice her height on sweeping limbs which bent backwards, not forwards. Gangly in form, appearing slight – almost delicate. Disarming, if she hadn’t bitterly known better and seen worse. Over a shoulder it carried the unmistakable silhouette of a large weapon, the ringed barrel pointed upwards and trained against nothing more threatening than rainclouds. It sported a single arm on the opposite side, fingers and wrist rolled back in on itself so it had the shape of a crude club. From its centre of mass an ellipse bulged, opaque and riddled with fine lines and something DeLune couldn't place. Any number of lights pulsed and cycled within, blinking some incomprehensible message.
 
It didn’t matter. She had no intention of trying to understand. Her leading hand worked its way downwards, creeping along the underside of the barrel. A solitary fingertip reached out and depressed the safety, making the rifle fully capable of killing someone – or something. DeLune reached for the cocking handle, keenly aware she would have to be fast and firm. There’d be no second chance. Depending on her luck, there might not even be a first. 
 
The skin of her palm pressed tight in around the grip grew hot and slick, even as her lips grew dry along with her throat. As she reached for the cocking arm, her hand began to tremble. Grasping the handle, DeLune ratcheted the slide forwards and chambered one of those last lucky six. 
 
Pulsing lights far below changed their rhythm and intensity almost instantly. Faster than she could return to a firing position, his target down below pivoted and brought its own weapon to bear. A building whine, on the edge of sensation at first but instantaneously becoming shrill, signalled DeLune’s death before she had the time to squeeze the trigger in her grasp. 
 
A loud clatter of something-on-concrete out of sight fought to snatch away their duelling focus, but from his vantage point above DeLune couldn’t do anything but watch. Unwilling to take her magnified eye from the colourful phantom even as it whirled about to face this new threat, she reset the focusing ring on the rifle scope and sacrificed detail for a larger field of view. What she saw wore through the last of pain relief that was all but spent. The adrenaline which burnt the blood in her veins for fuel would have to see her through this alone.
 
A shape darted through the collapsed innards of what might have once been a residence block, or a factory, or a store. It had been years since anything in this city had been more than ruins. A child. A redhead. Ragged, running freely and kicking up stones, clutching something stuffed that sported buttons for eyes but missed arms and legs. She emerged from the shadows of twisted steel trussing out into the open. The barrel of the Phantom’s shoulder-mounted weapon instantly swung about, tracking across to find its target. Taking a single step forward it froze, mirroring the little girl who found herself in the shadow of something incomprehensible. 
 
The pattern of those strange lights changed again, slowing down.
 
Snaking her finger inside the guard and taking up the slack on the trigger, DeLune blinked away the opaque, salty combination of rainwater and sweat dripping from her brow.
 
Suddenly the previously trained weapon swung abruptly up, back to threatening nothing more than sky. The Phantom stooped down – something that should have been awkward given its long limbs – somehow accomplished with disturbing grace. The stumped club of its single arm unfolded, until it flexed individual, multi-segmented digits. For seconds that stretched out to make agonising minutes, she watched; transfixed as this child and this thing stood studying each other.
 
Eventually, trembling, the little girl held out her hand. Those lights buried deep within the Phantom pulsed in another incomprehensible pattern and fashion. DeLune’s heart hammered against the prison of her chest in a dreadful, altogether familiar pattern.
 
Growing in confidence, the little girl cautiously offered up the remains of the stuffed animal she held. Taking it from the child with a deftness that seemed incompatible with something so much more massive, it spent the next few moments seemingly deep in whatever passed for thought inside those flowing organic lines. What passed for fingers closed around the toy, until they began to compress its dirty orange fur and cause the buttons for eyes to balloon outwards. Freezing and then reversing its grip, the Phantom seemed enraptured. Captivated.
 
Distracted. Vulnerable. 
 
Agony lanced through DeLune, forcing her to press teeth together hard to keep her jaw shut and the scream confined. Having burnt through medicine and adrenaline, there was precious little left to keep her focused, on track … And conscious. Reaching back inside the shattered window, she pressed a hand against her side and grimaced as something hot and wet warmed the skin. Smearing the ledge red and her hand clean, DeLune took up the target again. The little girl took a step backwards, unwittingly creating just enough space to give her a chance of growing up. She pulled the trigger. 
 
The first of a lucky six rang out, finding its mark with a detonating flash so bright DeLune had to look away from the scope to avoid making her eyes a casualty too. Before what was left of the city below resolved back into existence, a shrieking wail cut through her blindness.
 
The Phantom lurched forward; its long limbs suddenly emptied of all that grace as it stumbled. Colourful coruscating arcs crackled violently between rents in its smooth exterior, exposing intricate silver machinery underneath that was promptly blackened by each discharge. What was left of the weapon on its shoulder veered in random vectors, tracking imagined targets with the twisted snout of its sheared barrel. Impotent. Confused. Still, it screamed as it wheeled about. All but hidden by the erupting electrical impulses which danced between the damage on display, the lights buried beneath a translucent chest flickering furiously as they began to dim. 
 
From her vantage point above and as executioner, DeLune watched the Phantom die, or whatever approximation of death passed for it. Her finger remained taut against the trigger, but with only five rounds left and less than that in full pints of blood, she stayed her hand. 
 
The colourful ribbons of energy drawing lines between the thing’s wounds faded, and the wail softened so it became possible to think about something other than its deafening, all-consuming power. The Phantom’s thrashing diminished until, mercifully, it stumbled into a broken concrete barricade, toppled forwards and did not move again. In a final reflexive spasm, the segmented digits of its single hand splayed open, revealing an undamaged stuffed animal with buttons for eyes. As dead now as it had always been.
 
Jutting her neck outwards, Cooper scanned the scene. Of the little girl there was no sign, or at least no sign of a body. She had probably survived. Or she had died quickly. Only anything in the middle didn’t bear thinking about. 
 
There were already others creeping through the surrounding ruins, bearing down on her even though not one of them had ever even stepped foot within a mile of this killing ground. They didn’t need to; they’d all seen through the broken doll DeLune had just put down as surely as if she’d run each of them through with one of her lucky six. Phantoms brought more Phantoms. Every single time. 
 
A surge of anger fought its way up from the pit of her bleeding gut as she watched a dozen of them begin to converge on her location, twisting her features into a scowl. Not a single one even had the decency to attempt to avoid being an easy target. They picked their way through the rubble; using those long limbs to find a path between concrete, broken brick and mortar all the while presenting ceramic-smooth something to the muzzle of his rifle. Even their shoulder-mounted weapons – each one packing ten times the killing potential of her own – stayed upwards, tasting the rain instead.
 
“Why do you not fucking shoot me!” She shouted, voice distorting against the broken buildings beyond. Pulling herself up to her knees and oblivious to the pain it caused, DeLune rose above the ability of the window’s ledge to hide, but her challenge went unanswered.
 
Twelve impossibly-machined shapes deftly moved through larger, broken city shapes. Pressing her chest back down against the rutted concrete floor, DeLune shifted the rifle back into position. Determination despite the grim odds took control and the scowl soon melted away, joining the great lumps of boiled metal spread across the streets below where her first round hit true.
 
The rifle drove backwards into the meat of her shoulder with a crack, bruising it as she squeezed the trigger and sent a second of six through the surrounding devastation. This time, there was no accompanying flash or harrowing wail. Instead, the round impacted something stronger and thicker than thin air but just as invisible. The targeted Phantom continued forwards, nonplussed by the attempt. Hefting the rifle back up, she picked a new target and fired. Quickly now, with less patience and a deeper twisting of the gut that had nothing to do with anger. 
 
Three, four and five from six found their mark, each one in a new direction and none matched the success of the first. Each one abruptly stopped at point-blank range by something her eyes couldn’t move fast enough to see. 
 
DeLune did pick out movement a few hundred metres to his right, and she turned her head in that direction in time to witness an intense light paint a thin beam from the shoulder of a Phantom all the way up towards her. Concrete left and right blackened, sagged and pulverised under the assault, spewing out billowing clouds of choking dust and shards of masonry. The remains of what had once been a wall in front of her collapsed. Rolling hard, savagely crushing wounds repeatedly against the floor, DeLune pulled her knees up into her chest and tucked her chin down. The attack was uncoordinated, imprecise and the beam simply continued tracking up, cutting into the floor above. Rusted fixtures and broken fittings began to rain down, shattering as they struck the floor if they were delicate or simply punching through and continuing down if not. 
 
Struggling to draw anything but debris into her lungs, DeLune spluttered for air as she groped about in the dusty gloom, blind. Falling back onto her haunches, wheezing, her starving mind took a moment to try to count the spinning particles suspended in the haze. Something bright pierced the haze, disrupting her confused count and forcing her to dive forward. Head crashing violently against concrete, DeLune rolled onto her back, slack-jawed, and stared up helplessly at the beam of light cutting cleanly through everything in its path–
 
Abigayle’s eyes flashed open as she rolled to the side of the bed and gagged. The dream was always the same – real people, who bled and died – replaced by strange facsimiles but she always survived somehow. Walking metal ghosts … Phantoms, impervious to violence and her best efforts. A little girl and her teddy bear. A redhead. Some of it was true; some of it came from memory but others were distortions. Ripplies of the imagination that somehow merged with reality.
 
She brought up a hand to wipe at the sweat staining her cheeks, but met only air. Her prosthetic sat uselessly on the bedside table, a truncated and scarred forearm swinging pointlessly overhead. The fingers she had dreamed were still there only a few moments ago tingled. Not everything survived, it would seem.
But she always survived. Somehow.

She had never been a soldier. Why did she dream like one?

 


12
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XIX – Saviour Complex

[The Present – 75th and Roosevelt Drive, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA]

Wood rotted through with damp and burrowing worms bends under my worn shoe leather, sending a groan out that bounces against the water-damaged walls and gets even louder in the space between my ears. A whole bunch of doors present themselves as potential escape routes, all looking identical save the tarnished brass numbers that change as I scramble past.

They’re counting down in an allegory that hits too close to a certain home, one I’m too far away from to reach the comfort of. Out in the dark, running out of places to hide.

She’s standing there made in a silhouette, courtesy of a flickering fluorescent tube overhead that paints sickly yellow light in spasm. The shadows around that plastic face shift by a hundred and eighty degrees every few moments, making those painted features flex and warp. Still, those bright blue eyes never change. Feels like they’re counting down too.

“We must stop meeting like this,” She sings, and the tonality is all out of kilter with the serious penchant for violence it feels like is about to come my way. Before I can do much of anything, let alone think, I’ve already taken a half-dozen steps back until there’s nothing behind but those brass numbers on their way straight down to hell, intent on taking me along as a tenant six months behind on the rent.

“Not by choice,” I manage, swallowing in between the words. Inside my insides are split on a decision; what to do to get myself out of this tremendous world of shit that I’ve accidentally stepped in. No, leapt into headfirst with gusto based on how far down I’ve managed to end up. Part of me suggests the rapid application of my first upside her exposed jaw is the most expeditious solution, but that’s drowned out by the knowledge of the rest of the face underneath that pretend one …

As if on cue, she reaches up and begins to unclip the straps bunched around her platinum-blonde locks.

“Stop.”

And, in a genuine surprise that just makes this whole escapade that much more ridiculous, she does … Hands hovering in midair above her head.

She cocks her head to the side. “Would it not be wonderful to see her again?”

My eyes roll closed because my heart needs just a moment alone; despite the likelihood of a mischief or ten being delivered my way if I take those eyes off this evil standing in front of me and about to pretend to be something – someone else.

“She’s dead,” I manage, and even though it’s objectively and absolutely undeniably true, the tremor in my voice makes it sound like there’s room for doubt. Underneath that ceramic mask, I can tell she’s smiling and my gut twists in on itself another half-dozen times. “Got no use to see a ghost.”

“A ghost?” She seems to roll the word around her mouth as if trying it out. “A ghost …” Savouring the taste like some vintage wine or ridiculously expensive glass of aged grape juice that rich types spend a three bedroom suburban home’s equivalent on, then let it gather even more dust in their brickwork racks down in whole-floor basements.

She shrugs. “What a cruel way to talk about someone you once cared for very much.”

And then she pulls the mask free and I’m sent back years into the past, dragged there kicking and screaming and begging to go to hell instead for a while.


~*~*~*~*~

There is something wonderfully pure about fear. It has a truthfulness that no other emotion, except perhaps rage, comes close to equating. It does not rely on some complex moral or ethical framework to exist, because it is rooted in the deepest parts of the psyche. At the very core of any animal – the base fight or flight reflex and the programming that goes into deciding which stimuli triggers which response.

Contrast fear with something more virtuous, like compassion, and the latter requires some intermediary. Some processing to allow it to be distilled and collected and framed. Fear on the other hand, is direct from thought to reaction with nothing so time-consuming as impulse control. It is where we meet the real person underneath the layers of self-deception and neuroses and flat-out desire to be and act like someone else.

That is the truth I see written all across his face as he climbs up to his feet and turns away. He does not run; some semblance of machismo, or dignity – equally misplaced – keeps his pace to something akin to the maximum speed one is restricted to navigating through a busy airport terminal while their flight commences final boarding. He walks away with purpose, a singular one to put as much space between myself and him as possible.

Fear is a far more useful tool in the long-run. It breeds so many other useful weapons. Obedience being the principal. Alternatives such as compassion might give rise to powerful concepts such as love, but that is a dangerous and fickle thing to make use of.

I pause, frowning behind the plastic over my face. I am not even sure I know what love is. With so little time left, there does not seem enough of it left to find out.

He did not answer my question. He told me nothing about Roxi – except to signal his unwillingness to tell me anything at all. That is expected: we are not on the best of terms given our previous encounter ended one of his twin professional careers. I had not expected to see him again and yet, here he was. Perhaps I should have expected his involvement, given what I did to his beloved Amber. If I had stopped to give it further thought, I might well have made use of such a trumpet call earlier. Finished what I had started those six long years ago in Atlantic City …

I turn the corner and he talks of ghosts. A romantic notion, but one playing for time. He considers his options – he thinks about hitting me, but I know that will not happen. Not yet. It is too soon, and he is not ready. The inflection in his voice climbs some significant percentage of an octave, throat rasping. Dry. He swallows as my hands reach up and in his desperation, pleads for me to stop.

Surprisingly, I do. His tone is plaintive. Begging. Who would not be moved by it?

Fortunately, I am not moved for all that long and with a final twist, the straps fall loose around my shoulders and the mask drops down and free.

His eyes widen, then blink reflexively. Pupils dilate, fists ball. He sees, he recognises, but he does not really understand. How can he? After all, Mister Fexxfield is looking at one of his ghosts. Brought back to remind him of all the mistakes and indiscretions that have led up to this singular moment.

Something that might be anger flashes across his face; perhaps indignation at all of this. It is occupying precious real estate required for fear, however, and it is quickly extinguished. I drink in that delicious purity, allowing it to replenish me where it depletes him.

“Do you have anything you would like to say to me?”

His lips work wordlessly for a few moments, expecting something from impulse control and receiving nothing but staccato bursts of half-spun thoughts. His eyes narrow, as if he is trying to stare through something – burn through it and find some reality in the resultant gaping hole.

Fexxfield shakes his head. “You’re not her,” He mumbles, trying and failing to believe his own words. “She’s dead. Watched them put her in the ground myself.”

I smile, the same way she smiled and I can hear his heart stop for an agonising moment in total spasm. “And yet, here I am. I came for you.”

He squeezes his eyes closed, but he knows when they open again I will still be here. “Why’re you doing this, Abigayle?”

“Annabelle,” I correct, and he grits his teeth at the sound of her name. “Because you have not yet paid for the mistakes of your past. Now …”

Moving forwards, I close the gap courtesy of the locked door pressing up against his back until we are almost nose-to-nose. He cannot look at me, so turns his face away to present a cheek. My lips hover scant millimetres from his ears.

“I have answered your question,” I whisper. He shudders. “Now, I would like you to answer mine. What do you know about Roxi Johnson?”

He struggles to find some lump in the plasterboard of the ceiling to focus the sum of his attention on. “Beat you a few weeks ago. Broke the spell.”

Gently, I blow across his cheek and he shudders. “I do not believe in magic. There is no such thing. No spells. No miracles, no superheroes. No monsters. Only monstrous people.”

The first blow drives the air from his lungs and he doubles over. WIth the gentlest of pressure applied to the back of his neck, he collapses down into the dust on the flats of his forearms. I circle around, looking down. How disappointing.

“What do you know about her?”

His breaths come in ragged, strung-out gasps. “ … Isn’t here …” He manages between heaving. “ … Saving the day someplace else …”

The flat of my boot drives him into the dirt-caked floor just as he struggles up. “What else?”

It takes him longer to reply, this time. I imagine the taste of decades of foot traffic and rodent droppings takes some time to acclimate to. Eventually, the self-professed “Gumshoe” rolls onto his back and stares up at my face. He blinks away the pain until he meets my gaze and then tries to blink that away, too. “She stands for something better than you …”

Interesting. “Something better?” I drop to my knees, and run a single plastic forefinger down his temple. “She stands for nothing tangible. Nothing real. She is nothing but a symbol.”

“Symbols can be mighty powerful …” He rasps, jerking away from my touch and regretting the induced pain in his skull almost immediately. “Gives people hope.”

“False hope,” I correct. “Such a symbol did not help Miss Thomas.”

He lunges up and takes me tight by the exposed throat. I do not move, and he squeezes. The usual physiological response begins. My heart, engorged and enlarged behind the thick knot of scar tissue running the length of my chest reacts to the pressure by trying to pump more, pump faster through. My eyes begin to water, vision swimming. Still, he squeezes. My lips go slack, parting for air that cannot find a way further down than the back of my throat …

But he will not finish the job. He is a coward. “You bitch …” He hisses, resolve wavering.

Sure enough, the pressure begins to slacken and the window slams shut. His single opportunity ends as I press my neck in, forcing his grip back until my lips hover just above his. A little closer, until they graze …

He twists, pushing me away and rolling aside. “There are consequences for killing folk like that.”

“I did not kill her,” I reply, and that is the truth. “This city does not need any encouragement to turn on itself. I simply waited for it to do so, knowing a symbol is worthless if those that would do evil against it know it lacks any substantive power.”

A chuckle leaks past his blood-speckled lips. “The fuck are you talking about …”

“She is not here,” I clarify. “She was never going to be here, to help substantively. Meaningfully. On any given night, this miserable place and all its miserable people visit any number of awful things on each other, and she does nothing. With the gifts she is given, she engages in games and brinkmanship against chosen peers and tantalising prospects. Mask-wearing serial killers and other mysterious ne’er-do-wells. Where the lights are brightest and the eyes of the world can clap and fawn and indulge her Saviour Complex. A media forge to make her, cast her as a symbol.”

I climb to my feet. “Not here, at the corner of 75th and Roosevelt Drive. There is nothing to tease her cerebrally, vex her talents. Be worthy of recognition. Here, there are no dramatic interventions, thrilling face-offs or titanic clashes of good versus evil. Nothing worthy of comic book lore and crossover. Instead, here, people simply die. Alone and hopeless.”

“Perhaps if you are some criminal mastermind or worthy foe, Miss Johnson might deign to intervene and be something more than an idea or a name. If you are only intent on selling an Amazon Alexa for one more hit of something bulked-out with baby powder, something worthy of killing in desperate, hopeless cold blood … You are invincible. Untouchable and immune to any symbol.”

With pain writ across his features, Fexxfield drags himself over to sit up against a wall, still refusing to so much as look at me.

Standing over him, I reach down and sweep up the fedora sat overturned on the floorboards and run the threadbare rim through my plastic fingertips. “I want you to tell her something. Tell her something I know she so desperately wants to hear.”

He doesn’t bother replying, just concentrates on breathing in through aching lungs.

“Tell her I am bored of symbols, but that there is one in particular I am very much interested in making mine. Making more than a metaphor …”

The material is paper-thin in places, where years of exposure to inclement weather, poor drycleaning and too many narrow scrapes and tough escapes have combined to age the fabric well beyond its years. And yet, it has somehow become synonymous with Fexxfield. What was it my Resplendent Hurricane used to call him?

The Man in the Hat. Another symbol that stands for nothing of consequence when examined; when forced to give something more useful than hope. After all, Golf does not beat Gun, and Hope beats neither.

Although it is a mile-plus away, the throaty boom of a Church Organ fills my mindscape. Just like faith – a meaningless symbol without the strength behind it to act. To give it meaning. Purpose.

“ … Tell her I want to be Bombshells’ World Champion.”

Footsteps echo behind me, and for just a moment – a solitary fat and struggling heartbeat – I think she has caught me by surprise. In that single cardiac spasm I imagine turning to see her face, taut with anger and framed with red-fire locks. Fists balled, ready to strike and–

She is decked in red, but it is not a Painted Hurricane that has come to intervene. Instead, it is a Flower Girl Named After the Stars; announced by the clack-clack-clack of plastic heels against gouged wooden floorboards.

“Who are you here on the behalf of?” I ask, cocking my head to the side. She stands out in an agonising clash: cherry-bright lipstick, strawberry coat and patent-shining shoes.

Cassieopia does not answer for a while, instead she exchanges something wordlessly with the Gumshoe. Something I cannot translate; something I do not understand. The plastic fingers of my prosthetic writhe and unfurl in some subconsciously-driven loop.

She finally breaks eye contact with him to find it with me. “Myself,” She answers simply, as if that explains everything.

“Perhaps I should have let you jump off that bridge.”

I expect to see hurt, regret … Pain register in those usually contrite and conflict-averse features but instead, there is something less like suffering and more like cold and aloof agreement. “I think you probably should’ve. Would have made things easier.”

Interesting. But ultimately, a distraction from the task at hand.

“You are no longer relevant,” I summarise brutally, but accurately. The fedora in my hand spins away to land and kick up a thin pall of dust in the flickering mercury ion-light above. “It is almost time for me to make someone else’s heart my own.”

Drawing level with Cassiopeia, I turn to bring my lips to her ear. She continues to stare directly ahead, but the subtlest shudder at my breath on her skin betrays she is only playing the role of a statue weathering some storm.

“Your usefulness to me is at an end. If you inject yourself into my affairs again …”

Setting the composite mask back over my face, I push forwards and press the cold ceramic against her flushed temple. “ … I will end you.”
[/size]


[The Rapture]


For someone who is so keen to hear my prose, flowing and verbose and oh-so-cultured, you do not seem willing to listen, or take the opportunity to enjoy my lessons …

Perhaps you have spent too long switching between Business-Casual Johnson, notepad in hand and pen behind the ear as she scores scoop-after-scoop for the Daily Planet and the Superhero who triggers automated Traffic Collision Avoidance Manoeuvres as she loop-de-loops between commercial airliners. Too long such that the membranes between those two personalities and realities have become porous and paper-thin. I cannot think of any other more coherent reason for your inability to see events as they are and comprehend them as they were.

You talk above me, as if you soar above me, My Heroine. With the classic trappings of overconfidence – arrogance if you were any normal person without the ability to bend steel beams at will and leap tall buildings via a single incredibly tenuous jumping to conclusions – you think you have seen above my oh-so-mortal, pseudo-Machivilian schemes. My shallow efforts at manipulation, so obvious they are polished to a mirror-finish and shining brightly in the midday sun I squint at high above and you circle around at fantastical speed. Childlike efforts at cape-and-dagger, so easily ignored.

Triggered.

My Heroine, what were you doing when you rushed to ringside at Climax Control? Reacting to the sight of your wife struggling to scream around the composite fingers of my prosthetic pressed in and down her throat.

Triggered.

How exactly did you see through my transparent effort when you lauded and sang the praises of your “Momma Bear” and all the ways she would leave me wounded and still and blinking up at blinding spotlights overhead … Only to intervene as she struggled and gurgled and begged for me to stop? You were proud of your wife for being reduced to scratching the painted thorns from my plastic knuckles with her bare teeth, eyes streaming?

Triggered.

You have the strength of a goddess born of Themyscira; tall, striking and powerful and the emotional intelligence of a child sent alone to Earth from some distant world long since lost to space and time. You have the curious talent for spotting the truth in things like a trap primed in your path, only to step on some pressure plate or trip a wire and set it off so that you can gesture proudly to all and sundry of how right you were all along, even as it crushes your limbs or rends them from each other. Miss Johnson – you were triggered. I received exactly the reaction I desired which only builds on everything I have said before.

You cannot save any of them.

You think that your intervention at this Climax Control past saved Keira from some irreparable harm; but the damage was done deep inside her skull independently of it being crushed against steel ringpost and structural concrete. Miss Fisher-Johnson set out to teach me a lesson and instead, it was she who learned something valuable while in spasm and agony under my special attention. You did not save her – you simply arrived in time to watch her realise she had lost everything.

Unable to protect her child. Unable to fight her battles without help. Unable to do it on her own. Relevant and able to survive to see that child again only because of the post-hyphen of her surname. Because of you on that solitary occasion you were in the right place, at the right time to intervene as you so rarely are when it comes to the people and things you love. As if that alone granted superpowers. In the same way that she did not live up to my expectations, I am so very sorry to have failed to live up to yours. To have underdelivered. To bore you. To have let you down in the same way you did your wife and she did me. Although if I am honest, I am not sure in what way I disappointed, when I have done nothing that you have not done.

Namely, lose.

Do you think because my shoulders stayed pressed to the sweat-slick, bloodstained matting for three seconds that constitutes the end of everything I am? Everything I represent? No good villain could be so easily dispatched, even one drawn straight from the fantastical world you inhabit. That a single solitary defeat makes irrelevant all those who have been dispatched before; forced to recognise my great works and take their place amongst them? The idea is absurd like a work of pop-art: brightly coloured fiction.

Your rationalisations are as two-dimensional as the images on the printed pages of your comic-book origins. Your wife might not have cared about winning our match, but it makes such precious little sense that she cared so minimally as to end up in my agonising embrace until you saved the day. Perhaps it is you who continued on as if – quote – nothing had happened.

If a single defeat and a no-contest, equal exchange of beautiful miseries with Miss Vargas constitutes the end of my time as a legitimate threat, how can you be considered anything but a Pseudo-Champion? A BombShell-In-Name-Only. Tell me, Roxi … How many times did you fail? How many times were you defeated? It is heartening to know that for all your wondrous talents, your ability to resist the deleterious effects of a hard blow to the skull and the resultant post-concussive memory problems is no more developed than mine.

That is, presumably, the only way that you have overlooked your own innumerable and embarrassing failures and chosen an otherwise hypocritical logic which is as much applicable to you as, supposedly, me.

… How many of those occasions began and ended against a Painted Hurricane made Resplendent and then made Irrelevant by my thorn-painted hand? Where were your superpowers and that superhuman-powered overconfidence when Amber Ryan pressed her weight against your chest, blurry lights spinning overhead, until the bell sounded like a toll marking the end of another fruitless attempt at relevancy?

Even in your final victory over her, the spectre of inadequacy hunts you more effectively than I ever could. Because even after the wonderful agonies you inflicted on each other, through so many brutal encounters, leading to the archetypal triumph of the underdog – because you were never as good as she was – the asterisk remains poignant and heavy on the page …

*Defeated half a Hurricane and never got a chance to prove the world wrong.

Perhaps you would have somehow emerged triumphant in the inevitable rematch – cemented your status and put to pasture to see out its autumn years all those underhand comments and snide observations, but there was no rematch. I did not allow it to happen. I took away your chance to make your reign legitimate.

You are still Champion because I allowed it, and you will cease to be because I demand it.

In the same hesitant fashion you eventually took that Bombshells’ World Title, leaving so many lingering glances and so much cheek-chewing hesitancy to recognise your achievements as being legitimate, your so-called victory over me at the previous Supercard told you nothing. Proved nothing. You have already said as much, because you know it.

Your hypocrisy radiates from your in palpable ways like any number of villainous plot devices that bamboozle the mind or poison the soul or cut you from crotch-to-temple with no expectations to talk – only die. I disappoint you because I have lost my edge with one defeat and a no-contest … And yet somehow, My Heroine, you remain sharp and keen with how many more failures to your resume?

The spectre of that inadequacy hunts you more effectively than I ever could, but I will still hunt you. I will still take it from you.

The precipice that stands before you at Violent Conduct is so very deep and dark that its rocky bottom is shrouded in shadow, made from all the things you fear to speak of. At the bottom lies everything they have ever whispered about you, made true and heart-rending. Transitional Champion. Right place, right time. Wannabe … Should never have been. This reality now stepped free from the frames of your comic book pages is that you, Miss Johnson, have so much more to lose than me.

Faced with such a fate, it is no surprise the thin veneer of your plastic disinterest has split to reveal the surging, tumultuous feeling underneath. The apathy you wear as a shield is an off-brand alternative to Miss Ryan’s, and equally inferior. The RC Cola of indifference to her Pepsico disregard. No amount of aggressive marketing will compensate the former. Nine out of ten consumers prefer the taste of a real Champion with flame-red locks and a professional attitude and personal pleasure towards inflicting violence.

You are a discount, truck-stop second-best.

You are simply a poor facsimile of her. A photocopy made imperfect by aliasing and spectral bleed. That you have not been challenged openly on your market dominance in the absence of a major brand is only because the remainder of your middling, irrelevant challengers cannot so much as secure shelf space in this commercial and corporate metaphor. The absence of that major brand is by my design, not yours.

She would have taken that title back from you, and that is a truth you know to be indisputable and inarguable. That I prevented such makes your continued time as World Champion a reign at my pleasure, not yours. Your badly-fitted aloofness rattles against the frame of all your anxiety and internal recriminations and the sound of doubt-on-fear reverberates loudly like a pealing bell. The real you is so close to the surface now, imperfect and afraid.

I did not have to work particularly hard to expose the real you, Roxi – it spills out in foetid chunks and bubbling riptides like the turgid, dirty flow of the Ganges from every pore. Sanctimonious, patronising and smug self-superiority. The truth, stinking in the heat of a hot New Delhi Summer Sun, is that you cannot ever see beyond your own selfish desires, wants and needs. You do not process things as they are or were, but only how they relate to – how they advantage or disadvantage – you. Your maladjusted worldview, wearing a mask of its own in the form of a Saviour Complex, simply hides the reality that you do not give a shit about anyone else.

Take your attitude towards the stipulation of our match. How could any person with a stable moral and ethical base underfoot believe that having lost a hand is somehow a benefit? Do you hear yourself, or does the brightly-coloured ribbon tied around your forehead press too hard against the ears? How twisted up must you have become in your self-righteousness to believe such trauma can be reconsidered as a boon? Is it because I am not the darling of an understaffed and under-resourced police force? Is it because I am not as blue collar as Lieutenant Murphy? Is it because I do not Live, Laugh, Love in some equivalent of your apparent domestic bliss?

Do you know what it is like to have your arm blown off and reduced to a fine red mist? Have you ever been cut across your chest by the splintered fragments of your own ulna sent spinning back behind? Have you ever watched your forearm peel at the wrist like the writhing meat petals of some grotesque flower?

And yet somehow, I have the advantage in our upcoming match? Where is your compassion, the supposed hallmark of your profession?

Realise the reality, which strikes you down like no corruscating laser cannon or atomic disintegrator lined up against you by myriad fantastical super villains could, that it is not you who stands as some living embodiment of righteousness. Of justice – of truth.

It is me. I am the way and the path to the only truth that matters – the primordial truth – is through me. Return to that first garden, under the direct oversight of God in his greenery and finery and see that it is not my sibilant hiss that tempts Eve to partake of knowledge best left unknown and unsaid; it is you. After all, what else could describe someone who so repeatedly spares people the consequences of their actions? You are the ultimate enabler of behaviour which should reap justified consequence – swooping in on something unworldly to save the sinful from themselves.

They wallow in their moral filth, waist deep in the shit, scratching and fucking each other over for nothing but percentages; incremental leverage, meaningless victories that do nothing but give one some vanishingly fleeting advantage over the other, and you perpetuate it all through choice interventions that continue that cycle. Where is your enhanced sensibility to complement those other superpowers? Or is it, perhaps, less about the lasting change you bring about and altogether more the appearance of that change. The optics of what you do, not the material difference it makes.

The noiseless click of those digital cameras as they contextualise the online space with tales of your daring-do, while the honest work of investigating those left in pools of their own blood who were otherwise daring-don’t … Or more accurately, daring-didn’t-make-the-papers.

Unless, of course … You simply cannot help yourself. Perhaps it is less a purely narcissistic urge that drives you to inject yourself into the wider affairs of a cold and indifferent world, and something altogether more deep-seated. Less a want, or desire and more a need. A super-complex befitting a superhero. Something worthy of a saviour. Does it bubble up from the pit of your gut, or flood free from the deepest recesses of the most animalistic part of your mind? What first made it real? A painful childhood experience – some innate helplessness born from youthfulness? Did you clack the carriages of your wooden choo-hoo together, head bowed as your mother and father “talked” through the medium of broken glasses and shattered crockery and doorframes she did not see coming as she walked …

Perhaps you were never even there in-person to witness the chequered board so threatened and urgently in need of its White Knight; summoned after the fact and too late – left to carry the wound in your heart and your head for all time. A rudder hard-over which steers your ship in those same, tired circles. Doomed to chase its own wake trying to fix those that do not want to so much as acknowledge they are broken.

They will not acknowledge the truth because they are flawed, broken people who like the colour red and enjoy mint ice cream. They prefer to walk barefoot and feel the sun on their shoulders. Does any of this sound familiar? If you had listened, perhaps so but instead you are singularly focused on building some imagined version of me. A concept that cannot possibly emerge to fight you in New Delhi on Sunday.

Whatever drives you, Miss Johnson – some potent cocktail of delusion and ignorance, inflated, ponderous egotism or personal tragedy that demands self-sacrifice – the solution comes in the form of irresistible, immovable truth delivered courtesy of my thorn-painted hand; the facsimile of the one blown off to give me an apparent advantage in some arbitrary combat sport years after the fact, as you so eloquently noted.

The truth that I have spoken unwaveringly for every moment I have held dominion over a dark garden-of-sorts. My own Eden. One of creation, of the birth and gestation of a new Bombshells’ Division. One reshaped in a way that pleases me, that will be capable of so much more than the current rotten edifice propped up by mewling sycophants, deluded influencers and spearheaded by your imposter title reign. Tirelessly, I have overcome every significant obstacle to my rebuilding effort. They have all fallen by the wayside, some harder than others, as Miss Ryan learned to her permanent maiming and subsequent cost.

The truth comes in the form not of you as my final roadblock, but me as yours.

In the finest tradition of the graphic novels and tissue paper-thin comic serials you leap straight from the ink-bled pages of, I am the form of your rebirth. No hero remains static: the laws governing such superhumans are no more forgiving than nature is of a vacuum, and so you must change. You must grow … And nothing encourages that growth more than suffering. To become the better version of yourself, the current one must be proven insufficient to the task at hand. Be demonstrated as obsolete and inadequate.

At Violent Conduct, in your current iteration and configuration, you will be retired. What you choose to return as, in what guise and associated colour-coordinated outfit of spandex and plastic is for you to decide. The manner of your retirement, however, is not. 

Oh, My Heroine, you have fundamentally misunderstood why I want to take your everything and make it mine. None of this is for Amber – she ceased to be a factor in my mind when she ceased to be by my hand. That you believe all of this is to return the title to her simply betrays your failure to understand the complexities, motivations and machinations of your opponent until it is far too late.  She could no more take it from me willingly than she can reach a bathroom in a single journey without a preceding comfort break. Miss Johnson … We have already traded such special miseries adrift on the lonely sea, and you still do not really know why I am doing any of this.

It is my turn to be disappointed. Listening is clearly not amongst your repertoire of unearthly talents. Perhaps if you had done so, you would not have wasted such precious time exploring jarring discontinuities which make such little sense when you consider all I have striven for.

I grow tired of watching those I have gifted such greatness to conspire to find ways of squandering it. My gifts should not be taken so lightly.

I have spent so very long making others burn more fiercely so their radiance scorches the sky and sows destruction in all directions. For too long, I have been made a gatekeeper by corporate hierarchies looking to enforce their coercive will on the inexperienced, the foolish and the soft-headed dreamers stuck in Darling Dreamscapes. Manipulated, weaponized by those who thought they understood how to make use of my foibles and flaws to better serve their purposes by singing such sweet birdsong.

Now it is my time to control everything, my turn to seize the means of production of glory and hold it against all the hopeful and the hopeless who would dash themselves to pieces on the rocks for an opportunity to fail to take it. 

You can continue to attempt to build an image of me that does not really exist, and attack that instead. Continue to polish the facade of the challenger you would like to face, and not the one who will stand opposite you in New Delhi on Sunday. Wax lyrical about the aura of invincibility I never crafted – one given to me by fools, part-time superheroes, scared little girls and sometimes, their World Champion husbands and their love-triangle Private Detectives. Slay the persona constructed out of heaped generalisations concerning what I look like, rather than what I say. This phantom you have put such effort into making is not real, and what really lies beneath the painted ceramic is no more slowed by your victorious cawing than she will be when she takes your title and completes the final ascension towards rapture.

The only embarrassment is you, scrambling desperately for any workable rationalisation to explain your hypocrisy given the supposed moral and ethical high ground you occupy. With one breath you talk of your apathy, your boredom and your general indifference to the chaos swirling around you, and your title – a coolness which relegates all other problems to somewhere down beneath your feet and out of sight. With the next gasp from your lungs, you sink into paranoia and second-guessing.

You would be surprised what you can learn from the orderly staff of hospitals, and what they hear when changing bedpans and bedsheets. A little bird who could not sing told me you visited Amber, when she was restricted to communicating through increasingly aggressive blinks. You saw her cocooned in a forest of plastic pipes and softly-beeping machinery, held together by bandages and the most complex concoctions the pharmaceutical industry could lobby to provide. I destroyed her.

And yet, you think someone so comprehensively annihilated would sooner side with the Herald of their Destruction, to plot to dethrone you on the other side of the world? Do you hear how absurd you have become, Miss Johnson? You heard her groan in agony, blessed by the life-changing injuries I have visited upon her and still, you think she will work against you, for me?

Perhaps it is you who is overly-obsessed with Miss Ryan.

We come finally to the validation of all the cruel, but necessary things I have said about you thus far. Your internal monologue finds its route via a bypassed impulse control out into the wider world and speaks with your voice about all the things it fears. Those feelings of inferiority, of truck-stop second-best – of being a symbol of transition and nothing more – come spilling out. By your own words … Six months, having defeated one of the greatest Champions of all time …

They should be uttering your name in the same breath as hers. Elevating you to join Hurricanes and Raptures on a deserving dais under which the bright lights shine on all those accomplishments. Surely, it is nothing more than you deserve. And yet …

The world simply waits with the expectation you will lose.

No joyous outpouring for your ascension to the summit. In the place of a ticker-tape parade, only the weary resignation that eventually, somehow you would stumble upon success given the relentless opportunity thrown your way to somehow achieve a victory. Chance after chance, until entropy and statistical probability agreed to give you what it is you wanted in exchange for a chance to break the same, repetitive, tired cycle.

Now, the world simply waits for correction. For the natural order of things to reassert itself. An expectation you will lose.

You have been wrong about so many things, My Heroine, and you are wrong that this is some sort of beginning. It is not. It is an end. The end. After all, what greater irony sums up the current reign of Roxi Johnson as Bombshells’ World Champion, than the fact she has defeated the eldritch horror known only as Masque – the only one to have done so in nine long months – to have snapped a streak, broken the back of a monster … And proven nothing doing so.

To have beaten Amber Ryan, myself … And still feel like a silver medal hangs around your neck. Does that not seem fitting?

Even your affirmations and validations are temporary pauses between questions surrounding your worthiness. No matter how you answer those critics, they simply turn to a fresh page and draw question marks interspersed with  Superman-inspired “S” motifs as they doodle and wonder how long it will be before the natural order of things reasserts itself, and you are relegated back to perennial challenger.

At Violent Conduct, you stand to lose everything because you cannot save anyone, including yourself. You are a paper champion, an empty symbol. A transition from one era to another with a newer, grander, more rapturous design. A footnote and an asterisk, the combined contents of which summarise your reign as one of self-doubt and self-delusion.

It is the most delicious irony that your Saviour Complex could no more save you than it did anyone else who mattered. In the end, you were the victim of circumstance made happenstance. A perfect storm that made for a perfect ending, until those clouds made way for something altogether darker and you were caught out in the rain. Feel the ground turn to a quagmire that saps even your superstrength from every footfall, and see that it is too far to walk and much too dangerous to fly. That shining cityscape teasing you on the horizon is my grand design finally realised across this entire division and company. It is there so you can see what might have been, but not so you can be a part.  There is no place for part-time heroes, or empty symbols of strength.

Perhaps Keira can challenge me thereafter for an opportunity to become World Champion in your name, bicep circled by a black armband marked “R.J.”

There is just one thing left unsaid – something you asked for. Something I am pleased to be able to give you and say:

I want to be the Bombshells’ Champion.

I think I like the way it sounds, but you will not be around to hear it.

Welcome to the Rapture.



13
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XVIII – The Problem of Evil

[The Present – All Angels’ Church, 66th Street, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA]

Powerful chords born on compressed air reverberate round the high-vaulted ceilings; reflected by buttresses framed by stern-looking saints and wrathful angels as the organ sings its powerful glories to god. Dozens of brass pipes ringed by silver bands climb up clustered together, rising in a descending slope of absolute height based on pitch and tone. Tapestries depicting the Crucifixion and the Virgin Birth and all manner of Saints, intricately stitched with rich reds and blues and bordered in gold, flutter in the artificial breeze made by each blown note.

Polished stonework and pink granite reflect and redirect the music, forcing the composition back in on itself and down from high overhead – creating a rolling wave of discordance that presses down on the shoulders of the parishioners, backs bent over thumb-worn bibles and huddled in their dark oak pews. Some of them grit their teeth at the auditory assault, others close their eyes and let it consume them.

Immediately above my head a Gargoyle leers out from the balustrade running three-quarters of the length of the altar. Its sunken eyes are narrowed, rock-hewn teeth sharp, angular; carved lip pulled back in a permanent, rictus snarl. It stands sentinel over a large cross fashioned from shining, stainless steel. A metaphor for the ever-presence of dark things, perhaps. A crass one, heavy and thrown over the heads of those with no subtlety or complexity or ability to appreciate the finer detail. Such obvious darkness is no real threat: after all something so two-dimensionally, unequivocally twisted is hardly a danger. There is no permutation in which someone – even the dullards mindlessly mumbling along to their favourite passages all around me – could be caught unawares or surprised by it.

This is not the evil that men have built such houses of the Lord to guard against. Fortresses of faith to stand against. No, there is something subtler, more fundamental which hollows the soul and poisons the nebulous “good”.

Evidence of it comes in the hacked cough of an old man sitting over to my left. The sags in his pockmarked, gnarled skin shake and swing with every rattle of his birdcage chest. He seems to put more gusto into every spasm until his entire body shakes with effort. A crisp white linen handkerchief is pressed up against his lips but drops down out of sight splattered in red.

On the balance of probabilities, he probably does not deserve whatever is rotting him from the inside-out. That is evil.

Then, there is the pristine vision in candy-red sat to my right. Miss Cassieopia Mearns. She is ramrod straight, hands perched on her lap and staring straight ahead at nothingness. Deep in thought. Or simply lost. She has been that way since witnessing the end of a Hurricane in a basement in Long Beach. That was a difficult lesson, one she has not quite yet finished learning.

She does not want to be here. She does not want to so much as look at me but some small part of her has foolishly rationalised this as an opportunity to keep an eye on my whereabouts. As if a few hours snatched by my side mitigates the other twenty or so within which I am free to go where I please and do concurrently.

Cassieopia did not deserve to be used as a tool to achieve my desired ends. That is evil.

And yet all around, I am reminded of the need to guard and rise against such threats at vast expense. Monetarily is only the most obvious, since master craftsmen and their Gargoyle effigies do not come particularly cheap. The most valuable is temporal – time. Who can say how many gave such precious, irreplaceable time to create this vast edifice and testament. Those that laboured with love to create the organ currently professing that love to the Almighty? It serves only to make the very effort that much more ironic.

Without the darkness it professes to stand against … What precisely is all of this for? What use is a defence without its corresponding threat?

“Why’d you bother coming here?” Cassieopia says, eventually. Her eyes never leave the steel cross ahead, but the tightening of her cheek betrays that apparent laser-focus is weak and diffracted. She only pretends not to be consumed by the questions and confusion, because she has never known what it is like to ask. Only answer.

The answer should be obvious, if she took any time to step out from the molasses-thick, turgid wastewater of her own so-called problems and look at something bigger. Something greater. “It is useful to see the face of my enemy, so to speak.”

Those eyes tighten and for a moment, I think she is about to disappoint me by seeking some further context she should already know – burnt into the deepest parts of her psyche along with the scars I gifted her Hurricane – but at the last moment, the skin around her cheeks relaxes. Comprehension.

“You think you’re standing against everything that’s good.”

It is a statement. Declarative, unambiguous. It is not quite accurate – I think of myself as standing against everything this represents, but it is their word against mine that it constitutes something as nebulous as good. Still, what a shame it has taken her far too long, coming far too late, to finally find this sharp intellectual edge. A useful sword finding its blade long after the battle has ended.

The pandemic has given me the relative luxury of cloth masks, far more comfortable and socially acceptable than my usual composite facsimile and so when I turn to look at Cassiopeia, she catches all the intensity transmitted her way. She visibly flinches because she is simply not all that sharp or keen-forged after all. How unfortunate.

“Do you think I am evil?” I ask. It is a relatively simple question but through some great cosmically-organised underscore or coincidence made by worn rubber diaphragms or stuck valves, the enormous organ ahead and above us on the balustrade rings out with a discordant note – the all-too-human at its keys making an error, or the tarnished brass and wood wearing out under the strain of so many hymns sung unto god. Whatever the reason, it blares and hurts the ears as if to protest at anyone asking something so base and offensive in the House of the Lord.

Cassiopeia turns to look at me – directly at me. Into me. For a few seconds she stares, but it is not to help her make up her mind. Intrinsically, intimately, I know she is in fact looking for a reason to disagree. For any reason to say no.

But she cannot. “Yeah,” She says, and then she looks away. Back towards the cross.

The organ finds its song again, tremendous, powerful and coherent and I am left considering what feels like a paradox; growing as bloated and overwrought as the gold-trimmed, arched ceilings, precious metal-inlaid goblets and sterling-silver angels that stand all around me.

What is all this for, if not because of me? What purpose does any of it serve, if it is not to oppose my existence?

WIthout me, there is no reason for any of this to be.



~*~*~*~*~*~*~


You find all kinds of folk in these kinds of places, but very few of them have faith. Not real faith, anyway. Most are here because it’s preprogrammed like some fast-cook setting on the microwave. They just come hard-wired because of bad experiences masquerading as some kind of salvation, or indoctrination courtesy of plenty of Sunday Morning sermons on the quickest way to achieve spiritual damnation with a side-order of hellfire. A few have run out of options on a long road that could’ve led to anywhere but here, so they wear out the varnish on the pews, scuff the tilework underfoot and hope something prophetic will just descend to trumpets and harking heralds and show them the error of their ways.

A slither do, though. A handful believe all of this. Breathe it. They’re not just mouthing the words half-heartedly alongside the clergy swinging stinking censors that make your eyes water; they’re two steps ahead trying to divine the intent behind passage. Working through the word of god to divine the ecclesiarchial lesson of the day. They’re the most dangerous, because nothing is harder to reason with than a fanatic. Faith – true faith, at least – is right up there with one of the most dangerous weapons a person can wield. Comes in too many forms to count, but they all work the same. Hurt the same but harder.

I squeeze the thread-worn rim of the fedora in my hand as I look down at one such example from high up on the balcony. She’s far more liberal with her public appearances nowadays, and I can’t think of another person who’s benefited quite so much from killer respiratory viruses. With a simple face mask covering her mouth, she could be any number of young-ish professional women squeezing in devotion to the Father in-between Zumba and tickets for the New Jersey Symphony. Not with those bright blue eyes though. This one’s a killer. Seen her handiwork.

Almost became a statistic myself.

She sits next to that curious young lady. Always dressed in red. Another Flowergirl Named After the Stars … Cassiopeia. Company talent manager, drawn into a tangled web woven between the Rapture, a Hurricane, a Songbird and a decent man in the shape of Mac Bane. Spot the odd one out.

The corner of my stubbled cheeks twitch up in a smirk. That’d be the gumshoe.

That’d be me.

I slink out into the cool evening air, hymnals still blaring behind loud enough on the organ’s forced air to ruffle the leaves overhanging the Church’s southern entrance. Things are drawing to a close just like the five or six hundred copies of the Good Book(s) inside foretold. Just a matter of time …

Still, there’s other business to attend to. The business that pays bills and shines shoe leather and the walk to get into it takes me along smog-stained high-rises and miles of orange-flecked, rusted chain link fence. Way above my head three-lane freeways get carried over the horizon on huge concrete pillars – like the city just gave up trying to fix the decay down here and plain decided to build a way to get away from it up there. The odd streetlamp spits a dirty sodium-orange light in flickers that cast shadows on the rolling trash as it sweeps around in tiny spirals. It’s a miserable place, full of miserable people low on hope and high on all manner of narcotics and vices designed to suppress the need to feel that former.

The apartment block on the corner of 75th and Roosevelt Drive is probably too old and feeble to remember the good-old days when it looked like anything else but shit. If I look close – close enough to risk a fist through any number of the broken windows lining the ground floor – I can just catch a glimpse of the original brickwork facade hiding underheat the jutting lips of gouged windowsills. Everything else is black-and-grey, poisoned by the bumper-to-bumper snarl of traffic rolling past for the last sixty years.

Still, it’s a home to folk. A home to one-less tonight than two days ago and I’m here to help look into why.

Detective O’Mallory doesn’t really want to be here – and who can blame him? Solving this one is purely procedural or, to use a fancier term, the law. Ultimately nobody except the odd surviving grandparent is going to care much about finding out who did this and seeing them pay something back in return. It’s always a grandparent. The people who die in places like this are invariably estranged from every other family member. Mother, father … Kids. Seems statistically unusual, now I come to think about it, but O’Mallory doesn’t really have time for that. Or much of anything.

“Fexxfield,” He grunts without looking up from the trials and tribulations of his Fantasy League team. I stand there for a good few moments, waiting, until eventually he sighs and stuffs his phone deep into a pocket. Doesn’t let go of it though. “Be my guest.”

Stepping underneath the chevron-slashed warning tape, it doesn’t take long to case the scene and find it to be thoroughly, completely and utterly by the numbers. Standard forced entry by someone desperate looking for something – anything – of value. Desperate because only someone in serious strife or lacking in the brainpan would break into a godforsaken concrete box like this and expect to find anything worthwhile. Shame someone died for it.

And she died. Shot straight through the throat. There’s an antique golf club off to the side next to her outstretched, slack hand; the manufacturer’s plastic logo insert cracked and yellowed by age. Guess she heard him working the lock and had enough time to find something to fight with.

A poor hand to gamble your everything on, though. Gun beats Golf everytime.

That’s when I notice the distinct lack of … Anything. No crime scene analysis of any kind. No tags, no evidence bags. Not even the telltale streaks in the blood stained carpet which mark where the coroner knelt in protective overalls that would never see such a shade of white again. It’s like she died a half-hour before and not the two days and change ago.

“Kev?”

“Huh?” He looks up from his phone, follows my frown and shrugs. “Cutbacks,” He says and then glances back down.

That’s not good enough. “Cutbacks?”

O’Mallory sighs, puts his phone away for the second time – still doesn’t let go, does he have big money on this or something? – and blows his cheeks out with whatever’s left in his lungs. “Does “reprioritisation of focus” work better for you? Department’s figured out where to pump the green and it isn’t on applying the scientific method to nobodies like this.”

“No offence Ma’am,” He adds, glancing down at the corpse.

Pawing at the shadow of a beard making my chin itch, I glance over my shoulder. “Where’s it going instead?”

From over near a coffee table, examining one of those generic bone-china decorative plates covered in floral patterns that constitute ninety percent of a Thrift Shop’s rolling stock, he takes a turn to frown. “Don’t you watch the news? Or TikTok?”

“Don’t much feel like being told what I should worry about,” I reply. “ … And I’m too old to watch folk twerk.”

“Twerk? Jesus Christ Terryl–” He cuts himself off with a shake of his flat head. “Whatever. Anyway, we don’t need to bother investing in solving crime anymore. Got a superhero to do it.”

Now I get exactly what he’s talking about, as I carefully step over the lolled head of the unfortunate lady down below. Her glass eyes are locked in an unwinnable staring contest with an unsettlingly child-like doll in pigtails and gingham dress over on a nearby shelf. “You’re talking about the one with the incredible power to just walk into any police station in this city and conduct her own interrogation?”

That gets a chuckle. “Would have thought flying was the most impressive thing she could do but, yeah. Her. How’d you know about that anyway?”

“Can’t fly, but know some folk,” I shrug. “They talk. Breeds as much animosity as it does good. You know that.”

O’Mallory’s tone takes a hard right and leaves black rubber streaks on the tarmac. “Fucking right I know it! Here I am pissing around with this Jane Nobody-Knows – Again, sorry Ma’am – while all the choice assignments are following that superhero around, following her in … And just watching her do it all. Then clapping politely and back to the Precinct to wait for the next reason to fire up the massive projector on the roof of HQ and ask her to come and do our jobs for us again.”

I stoop down, knees bent and slip a latex glove over one hand. Gently I brush a lock of blood-flecked hair at my feet back behind an ear.

“Doesn’t matter how great she is at sleuthing, Kev. She can’t replace you; superhero or not.”

Something sarcastic bubbles up from his overhanging gut, mixing with laughter to make the resulting laugh caustic enough to burn the splattered carpet underfoot. “What makes you say that?”

One of those decorative flower plates is lying upturned near her thigh. Carefully I slip a finger underneath the rim and flip it over to reveal half a bootprint pressed into the fibre. Bingo.

“Because she isn’t here,” I shrug, climbing to my feet. “As good as she might be, she’s just one person. Might be an incredible flying, superstrong, super-charismatic A+ measure of a woman … But there are certain laws of physical nature even superheroes can’t beat no matter how much Unobtanium gave them strange and freakish powers. One of those laws is impermanence. She can be uncovering serial killers with multiple personalities and a fetish for putting masks on dead peoples’ faces … Or she could be here trying to find out who killed …”

That gives me pause. “What was her name?”

“Estell Thomas.”

I glance around. What did poor Miss Thomas here die for? I spot it on my second pan around the Living Room. A loose power cable dangling over the tabletop. Stepping across, I reach behind and pull the plug free from the wall.

AMAZON ALEXA ASSISTANT is embossed on the hard black plastic.

“She could have been here working out why Estell got shot through the voicebox for an Alexa,” I say eventually, snapping the plastic glove free from my fingers. “But she isn’t. And we are. That’s the thing about superheroes. They can’t save everyone. That’s for normal folk like us to try our best at instead.”

Taking a final glance down at poor Miss Thomas, I sweep the fedora left on the book by the wall up and onto my head. “They hardly save anyone. Happy to take it from here?”

“Ecstatic,” O’Mallory grumbles, taking my pep talk with as much enthusiasm as he can spare from the glowing screen of the phone in his palm. “See you around, Fexxfield.”

She cuts across me before I get much further than the adjoining corridor and in the blur, all I can do is stumble back to create space. The shift in my equilibrium makes a surprise situation worse and I fall, ending up levered half-up on the painful points of my elbows. And then she stands there, in the fucking flesh, taken straight out of my nightmares and given a form plucked from fever-dreams and sweat-soaked sheets.

“Hello Terryl,” Masque coos, blue eyes cutting into my soul from behind a ceramic mask painted crimson-red; deep enough to make my thoughts bleed. “It is so very good to see you again. I have missed you.”

She steps forward on long legs that signpost the way straight to hell. “I would like to talk to you about superheroes,” She breathes, voice somehow rattling against the shit-stained walls as nothing much more than a whisper. “Tell me – what do you know about Roxi Johnson?”



[The Rapture]


The Australian Philosopher, John Leslie Mackie, once pushed the blade of a theological problem through the thin skin of organised religion with a carefully-constructed papercut: that there is no way to reconcile a benevolent, omnipotent, omniscient God with the existence of evil. For if the Almighty works with kindness as his principle motivator, can do anything, know everything – how can that exist in an existence premeditated on suffering and misery? It is the beginning of a paradox more powerful than the most daring biblical tales of man-eating whales and strong, independent women turned into pillars of salt. Instead, we must consider three components:

God is all-powerful.

God is intrinsically, fundamentally, good.

Evil exists.

Only two from three can be true, and one from three must always be the existence of evil. Of course we can sample it empirically at our leisure; all around us … Filling our eyes and ears and heart with so many terrible, awful things and sometimes, poisoning us from the inside-out. This world is full of magnificent examples of the terrible things we both do to each other and in turn have done upon us. Look no further than Climax Control recently passed, and remember the wide, wild eyes of Miss Fisher-Johnson as I squeezed the venom from her veins and made her into something less than nothing.

The existence of evil is beyond question … All the most awful atrocities. Most sickening acts. But I digress, it is so easy to get distracted. If I close my eyes I can still feel the way Keira jerked and thrashed in blind panic on the end of my prosthetic …

Perhaps we can make this even simpler. If God is fundamentally a force of good and therefore willing to prevent evil – but cannot because he does not have the means – then he is not all-powerful. If he has such mastery, but refuses to use it, then he is a cruel and capricious God and in no way, shape or form, good. If he is all-powerful and benevolent … Then from where can evil spring forth? Not from his divine hand in such a case, but from nowhere else since all is his domain and glory.

The answer seems so simple. So clear. God is dead, and we have killed him and built an Iron Underbelly on his montheistic corpse. Thus, it is not a problem of evil that must be considered, because its solution is simple. Instead, consider its reason to be. Its purpose.

What is the rationale behind something evil?

That answer, of course, is all too often lost in the wrong question asked. Foremost on the lips of those who should know better is how it can be defeated. Destroyed … But something that is defined by its lack of definition exists above and beyond such easy annihilation. Evil is simply the absence of regulation, of rulesets. Of law. It is the expression of random inputs – an output which subscribes to no common-sense, no rhyme or equivalent reason. It is because nobody made it not, and that is all the associated reason required to exist and function. It is wonderfully liberating but otherwise hollow. Understanding what it is, what defines it, is an exercise in futility or academic literature review.

Instead of asking how it can be overcome, a far more compelling question is why it is there in the first place.

It exists because of people like you, Miss Johnson. It exists because without it, remarkable heroes … Like you … Cannot be rationalised. After all, what use is the ability to fly if all the world could do so without the use of tens of thousands of kilograms of metal and plastic propelled by controlled explosions twelve thousand metres above the ground? If good people did not die screaming, begging for someone – anyone – to help them, what benefit would you bring to anything?
 
Do not wonder where it came from, or what it is supposed to do. Instead only ponder why it exists in the first place. Then, it will become clear and suddenly The Problem of Evil is re-characterised. Rebranded and remade. Reforged.

The Problem is only a variable within a greater calculation. A Superhero Equation of sorts.The Johnson Theorem, made manifest by understanding what exactly comes for her at Violent Conduct a week on Sunday. Who comes for her in that quiet, contemplative-turned-horrorful night.

We are all a product of our origins, for good or ill. Some of us carry those lessons as stories and others as scars; a few lucky enough to bring both. These experiences combine with the environment we are born into and transition through to form the factors, the variables, which derive who we are. By its brutalist definition, such derivations will create the uninspired, the average, the middling and the good. Occasionally, it will produce the truly great.

Greats like you, My Heroine. Remarkable people for remarkable times.

But of course if everyone could fly safely, there would be no need for aeroplanes. Or Flight Data Recorders. Or teams of highly-trained investigators to comb through the shattered fuselage pressed into the side of a windswept hill, carefully picking their way between broken seating and the odd, colourful flicker of a stuffed animal twisting inside a noose of burnt electrical cabling. Such remarkable people are needed in those remarkable times.

And so, what use is the Champion without those that seek to dethrone her? What possible justification is there for a Superhero without a climatic, world-shearing tussle to emerge victorious through? She is defined only by the opposition to her.

You are made real because I exist.

A curious thing has come to pass recently which marks a crucial turning point, although perhaps not the one you have come to expect. Up until our first encounter at Summer XXXTreme, much was made of my so-called streak. It occupied precious electronic and printed column inches, the topic of frequent conversation around catering tables and on any number of podcasts. The incredible analytical powers of Miss Vargas – when she was not attempting to separate my head from my shoulders – even waxed lyrical about it. Interestingly, perhaps, the focus of this streak was not its length, but that it proved the exact opposite. With every individual beaten, I became less credible. More likely to suffer imminent defeat. In some inverse representation of any other competitive occupation the world over, my success made me less successful.

And then of course, it came to an end as all things do. I should have disappeared. What more was left?

Gradually, the narrative shifted. Numbers, records, they all began to sink into irrelevancy. Now they spoke with trepidation, worry. Fear. Where before catering would sing to the cackle of those who waited for the next sacrificial lamb to fail to prove their worth against me, now they hesitated. Even the legendary Miss Vargas trumpeted survival as a victory of sorts.

Incredibly, the narrative I had always espoused – simply that I stood here and therefore would endure and that streaks and records were meaningless – gained traction. New weight. They started to believe it. I ceased to be a threat because of what I had achieved, and became one purely because I existed. A self-justification loop.

I am here so that you can do such great things. I am here because there cannot be something wonderful without something terrible. The Johnson Theorem must balance, My Heroine. There can be no remainder left over by which to shrug and scribble out on a lined page smeared with other errors.

That is the theoretical. The possible. The what-if. It is the what-was that tantalises and offers a glimpse of something so much more exciting. You saw it yourself, so recently when you strode out from behind swishing black curtains to save your wife from herself because once again, she did not listen. A common occurrence, I think and a critical dynamic between both of you. Does it bore you to repeat the same warnings, time after time, only to have to rescue her?

Unlikely. There is no such thing as a Superhero minus a Saviour Complex. What else would you do with your time?

In Keira’s rage and her hate, she was blind and slow and ponderous. Do you know what I saw this week past, in Chandigarh, as I watched your wife roll out from underneath the bottom rope, tear the ring bell from the Timekeeper’s grasp and bring it back inside? Not vengeance. Not a so-called “Mama Bear” – the notion is laughable, because she could no more protect her offspring than she was able to protect herself – and not a threat. No; I saw weakness. Fear. Another way inside. Another way to you.

You cannot save any of them.

What did Keira meet after she finished intimidating pudgy referees and wizened officials struggling to jump to conclusions? She met and tasted the plastic forefingers of my prosthetic as I crushed the soft palate of her mouth. Stole the air from her throat that should have been used to give her agony a voice, a scream. The way her knees sagged and her body became a whole, burdensome weight. The feeling of limpness as that rage and hate drained away to be replaced by the dawning realisation that she was mine. I wonder if in some strange way, this is what it feels like to give yourself to someone so completely, as you and your wife must exchange in your most intimate moments. I feel as if I have shared something intimate with Keira as I felt her resistance fade. Made her mine. It is so difficult to describe, because I am not sure I have ever felt it so keenly before. That feeling of submission …

It is something to be added to my box of treasures, alongside the professional life and career of Amber Ryan. When I open the lid it sparkles and shines with such magnificent radiance. It is so heady, my mind swims and my soul rolls in the glimmer of such strength laid low. Taken as my personal property.

Your wife came to defend her honour – your honour, Miss Johnson – and ended up on her back mewling softly around my crushing grip. Gurgling for mercy, until you decided to intervene in spectacular, multicolour glory. Another dramatic entrance and appearance to save the day and yet, what took you so long to make an intervention? You must have foreseen how this would end because you know, intrinsically as if your very bones had foretold it with some paganistic spell of scrying etched into their marrow, that she could not stand against me.

You knew it. Must have known it when I left her sprawled, concussed and insensitive on the concrete. But you chose to let her endure. Suffer. Perhaps you were teaching her a valuable lesson about overreach. A tough love of sorts, so she picks future battles more wisely.

Or, perhaps, you cannot save any of them.

You appointed yourself a saviour in a place that consumes martyrs as effortlessly and easily as it annihilates amateurs and pretenders. In amongst the Zdunichs, the De Salcos, the Bentons – all manner of wannabes, never-weres and never-will-be – strides a living superhero self-installed as this Company’s conscience and morality. You were certainly never sought, because this is a place which runs on hurting others for fame and glory. And money. There is no place for an arbiter or gamekeeper. And yet here you are, operating on a mission of interventionism and justice. Uncalled for and unilateral.

For how long did you think you could discharge your duties as Judge liberated from the need to preside over their Jury? Did you think your action would disappear into the wider cosmos without generating anything resultant? The truth that you will one day find wounds more deeply than the loss of your Championship, again, is that you set into motion what will happen between us in New Delhi. The path that has led me to you was built by the sum total of all the mistakes you have made under the inflated ego masquerading as a moral compass.  In a way, Roxi … You made me.

As a Mother … Of sorts, you should be intimately familiar with the fundamental purpose of those that are made in your image. They exist to eclipse. To replace. Is it not wonderful to think of the things I will achieve in your image and stead?

I am the natural correction of the system to your influence. Your corruption and usurpation. For too long you have changed the natural order of things; saved those who should never have been allowed to endure in their bumbling, blind thrashings. Acted as a brake to those who should have been allowed to embrace their most terrible potential.

So I am born to correct this anomaly. To correct you.

No matter how intensely you fight, you cannot save any of them. For all the powers you have over me, made only of flesh and bone and plastic, you did not save those who deserved your help. Where were you when I crushed Miss Chloe Benton under my heel? When the entire Company rose up against my excesses, when the need for a hero was acute and burning … Where were you?

Plotting another failed attempt to defeat my formerly Resplendent Hurricane. A task you achieved by happenstance, temporarily, only after entropy had used the vehicle of time to wear her down sufficiently that even your dumb-luck, shit-fling strategy eventually found mark on the wall and purchase. Instead, I defeated her permanently. Broke her body, took her spirit.

Where were you when Keira struggled to spit out your name? All your idle threats to me, my bodily integrity. All of which counted for nothing as I felt your wife’s lips flex and writhe around my composite fingers as a simple pressure. My prosthetic did not register the pain of her teeth scraping against its paintwork. I could not feel the wet heat of her blood-choked mouth: all there is was a deep and intense pressure. Nothing more, nothing less.

I want you to know that if you had waited any longer, I would have snapped her jaw in half and she could have saved her vitriolic rambling for the written word, while speech therapists spent months teaching her how to reform glottal stops with the stitched remains of her soft palette.

Would you have stayed home, and nursed her through that long and painful recovery? Washed out the feeding tube used to pump high-nutrient paste directly into her stomach, bypassing the ruined mouth that had gotten her into so much trouble? Somehow, I do not think so. The wider world could not do without its saviour while you tried to decide between Chicken or Beef.

And between saving the world and saving your wife, perhaps you might find time to be Bombshells’ World Champion. There are so many vying for that prize, but they all desire it for such selfish reasons. Fame, glory. Money. They see that you have it and so they want it.

But that is not why I want it, Miss Johnson.

You are not carrying an accolade, some trinket trimmed in gold and shining stone. You are carrying a Heart. It is representative of something I have worked for so long and so hard to make mine, and it is the final piece of a celestial machine so many agonising months in the assembling and priming. With it I intend to seal my greatest triumph and hold in my plastic hand the sum total of an entire life spent in sacrifice, in the chase for a strength that could never be found within. Amber’s strength. Not yours.

In your hands, it tarnishes. Copper turned green. A sickly patina of corrosion that risks heartbreak.

You are an accidental Champion and this was never your time. Happenstance made you mighty; fate intervened where fortitude and grit had failed you previously. You are stronger than most, better than most – me, by the simple metric of our cruise together – but you are only one person. You are not a Hurricane. It should never have been yours to take.

And with her gone, with any potential to put such ghosts of doubt to rest for all time dead and buried, there is only one road that will take you past an opportunity to test those hypotheticals. Learn whether you truly are worthy in your own stead, or a blurred and lined copy of a greater Champion cut down before their time. Before the time of my choosing.

Summer XXXTreme was meaningless, because it gave neither of us what we truly wanted. It did not answer anything of substance, leaving open only the opportunity to ask those same questions again, with the only difference being this time they will be answered. Conclusively and absolutely.

You made me, My Heroine. I am the natural response of the system to so-called order. A Rapture forged not through hedonistic, willful thrill but a swirling maelstrom of violence and pain and misery … And consequence. Everything that has happened, that will happen is because you forgot in your rush to act as a beacon of light – a lighthouse for this company to shine against the splintered, black rock of said Rapture – that the light must turn. Must move. By its nature it will look away from time-to-time, shine elsewhere.

And when it does; when its attention and luminescence light up some other place and time, the dark settles in and down.

Where you go and do such great works, I will unmake them elsewhere. Everything that you strive to build will be destroyed when you leave it shining and complete. Your career is forfeit, because I will take that which has come to define your time as this Company’s self-appointed Guardian. Your family is forfeit, because I will finish what I began with your wife until she is as much mine as yours, laid down at my feet and begging to be spared my most beautiful miseries. Your legacy is forfeit, because these feckless, capricious fools will not remember what you did for them and who you saved.

They will only remember those that died alone, nervously clutching a golf club in their sweat-slick fingers, sobbing as the door began to shake on its hinges. They will forget about serial killers wearing masks and multiple personalities, but they will talk about Estell Thomas. Murdered for a talking alarm clock. For no reason at all.

Because you were not there, Roxi. Because your light was shining someplace else, and in every other azimuth it did not, terrible things happened to people who did not deserve it. I wonder … What awful events will come to pass while you are focused on me in New Delhi, a week on Sunday? While your wife and her fat baby boy share the same apple-flavoured mush while the former nurses a badly bruised throat and ego? Will they stay squirrelled away behind locked doors?

It is such a dangerous world, and we cannot rely on others to save us. Even superheroes cannot be everywhere all the time – especially when they are fighting for their very life. If nothing else, if a promise counts for anything in terms of everything we have exchanged up until this moment, then rest assured even when restless, staring at Keira as she sleeps beside you, that it will take nothing less than everything you are capable of to best me.

You will leave the Indian Subcontinent as World Bombshells’ Champion or you will not leave it at all. The time for games and masks and innuendo is over. You have something I need, I want and there is no other way to get it other than to pry it from your hands. Fortunately, it is far easier to do so when you can only grasp it with one; the other holding on to everything else you hold dear. All the other things vying for your attention.

I am singular. You are my world, because you made me. Created me. There is no other reason here, now, in the present for me to exist. I do not think you can say the same. I know you cannot say the same.

A million little demands, all combing into some overwhelming, nebulous, consuming drain. Making some natural toxin to your power, a glowing stone of weakness that forces you down and onto your knees whenever it appears.

Oh, My Heroine – I am your equal. Your opposite. Your Kryptonite, if you will pardon the metaphor. It is time to test the mettle of your steel when you are at your weakest and discover whether Roxi Johnson represents the pinnacle of this Company, or whether she was nothing but a sidekick to the true superhero in the whirling dervish of a Painted Hurricane.

It is time for you to step out of her shadow. Time to take a deep breath, forget justice. Forget morality, step off your plinth so high above me that I must press my hand to my eyes to blot out the sun and come down to join me in the shit. Here, we will kill each other for the right to finally, unequivocally know in the absence of god, what will triumph. Good? Or Evil …

I hope before you drown in it, my prosthetic wrapped around your throat, you come to regret all the things you have done, did not do, that led you to that moment. If you had defeated Amber on any one of the previous myriad occasions, if you had taken more time for your family and less for those that would not stop to look at you lying on a blood stained carpet, gold club by limp hand, if only you had stopped long enough to see what was stalking you in the blindspots created by your burning need to save everyone …

There is no longer any reason for you to ask, to define what the absence of light is.

There is no longer any need to ponder the shape of things left when good is gone for a while.

There is no longer any point in trying to imagine a world where you are no longer World Bombshells’ Champion …

… Because the answer to all three, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, is me.

Welcome to the Rapture. It will make you pay for all the things you should not have done.


14
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XVII – Fisher-Price Blues
 
[The Past– South Ossetia Avenue, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA]

I know from the way he bites his lip, he’s stalling for time.

Not time to get away, because he’s cornered. The only door is right behind me, and I’ve got him angled up in the corner. No, he’s stalling time so he can decide on the best way of trying to get past me.

“Can’t we be reasonable men?” He half-laughs, eyes darting wildly back and forth.

Slowly I remove the fedora from my head, setting the hat down on a nearby table. Calmly, I unbutton my suit jacket, slip it off my shoulders and hang it on a chair. Tugging at it, my tie loosens and then ends up coiled on the desktop like a snake.

I begin to roll up my sleeves, “The time for reasoning passed when you tried to cut me, Clive.”

“You were trying to take me in!”

“You were trying to get away with murder,” I shrug. “Literally.”

He shifts his weight. It’s almost time for him to make his move. “You ain’t a cop. Not anymore. Why do you care?”

He launches himself out of the corner before I have a chance to answer. Dropping to the floor, he tries to scramble between my legs but I’ve got just enough time to take a sharp hop back and give some clearance. Caught in No-Man’s Land, Clive doesn’t have the time to think, let alone react before my Oxford Patent Leather shoe is driven into the side of his head.

He lets out a scream, rolling onto his back and clutching his temple. Poor old Clive here never meant to kill anyone, he just got nervous and combined with a poor understanding of how to use a pistol safely, he wound up putting a round through that poor girl’s eye. That’s why he doesn’t have the constitution of a stone-cold killer. It’s why he’s overacting now. It’s why I don’t buy it.

Following up with a swift boot to his ribs, I roughly shove Clive onto his front with the flicked toe of my shoe. He coughs, spluttering and wheezing. Suddenly he’s still, concentrating on his breathing. Now I know he’s not faking.

“ … Because I get paid,” I answer eventually. “I do a job, I get paid. That’s the way of the world. Unless you take short cuts …”

Reaching down, I haul Clive to his feat. “And look where taking shortcuts got you.”

“Fexxfield, Come on!” He whines. “It was an accident! This State will put me on the gurney for sure! I don’t want to flop around like some dying fish! Take me over the State Line at least!”

Tears start to stream from his eyes. “I don’t want to die!”

“We all die, Clive,” I shrug without a trace of emotion in my voice. “The only variable is how you choose to go.”


~*~*~*~*~

The overhead spotlight makes her skin shine with a pearlescent sheen that seems unearthly – as if the flesh is dusted with diamond. Stripped of context, to the untrained, she might be some intricately carved work of a woman; carefully hewn from polished marble and painstakingly shaped. She might have been mistaken for something made, not born, were it not for the ugly wound punching a congealed hole straight through the front of her skull. The blood has long thickened to molasses, leaving a lumpen star-shaped stain that leaks all around the ruined remains of her eye socket.

Lines are still pressed into the folds around her mouth, courtesy of the oxygen mask pointlessly strapped into place. The remains of a crumpled intravenous bag swings limply over the edge of the gurney, suspended on kinked plastic tubing stubbornly hooked into her sunken arm. Evidently, at some point, her body had taken a nine millimetre round to the skull and gambled that life might still find a way. The heart had continued beating, lungs filling with air because they were incapable of truly understanding. Life, at its most basic, fundamental level, was simply concerned with existing.

All the truly useful components; sentience, consciousness – they were the first trinkets dropped whenever something or someone faced true annihilation. An irresistible urge to survive overrode all other considerations. And so this young woman, apparently shot accidentally in a store hold-up gone bad, gone catastrophically, died twice with an hour’s grace in-between mortalities. Once, as everything she truly ever had been was puréed into a fine, pink paste and again when her autonomic nervous system accepted the overwhelming odds and gave in.

But of course, it did not simply give in. It just died. There was no capacity to understand the absurdity of trying to continue to live with a large window permanently installed into the front of your face. And so she lies here, while bureaucracy takes hours to reconfirm what is obvious by a cursory examination from up to thirty metres away.

“Doctor DeLune?”

I do not bother turning around. Instead, I simply swirl my signature across the grease-stained clipboard which reconfirms the cause of death and set it down on the nearby table with a clatter of rumbling, hollow steel.

“Terribly sorry to bother you …”

“I do not think you are.”

There is a long pause, and what sounds like half a chuckle. Stepping around and into the overhead light, I recognise the threadbare fedora and creased suit of one of the city’s numerous homicide specialists. Morgues are the favoured haunt of many Detectives and – where staff shortages force a shift or two in one – it is inevitable the same haggard faced reappear looking to bypass State laws on privacy and glean some critical insight to solve a case that will bring no-one back to life or make any material difference to the suffering inflicted.

This one, however, seems different.

There are lines, yes. A cut or two permanently etched into his stubbled chin but nothing made by the blade of world-weariness. Instead, his demeanour seems altogether chipper. Perhaps he has mistakenly stumbled down here looking for Pediatrics …

“Suppose not,” He shrugged. “Name’s Terryl. Atlantic City Police Department–”

“Obviously,” I interrupt. “How can I help you, Detective?”

He looks down and whatever carefreeness survived our initial exchange drains away in one of the dozen grates lining the lime-green tiled floor. “Here about Claire …”

“Claire?”

Terryl dips his head, the brim of his fedora dropping towards the gurney. “This unlucky lady.”

I did not know her name. Craning my neck, I check the clipboard. “Claire Kalvin.”

He nods. “Yeah.”

The response is automatic, ingrained. Easier to allow it to spill out than to bother to refrain. “Sorry for your loss.”

“Didn’t know her much,” Terryl shrugs. “She could have helped a lot of people though with what she knew.”

“She was an informant.”

His eyes widened only momentarily, the surprise quickly passing over. “Sharp, Doc. Didn’t think you paid that kind of attention.”

“I do not. But it is obvious.”

For a few moments he stares down at the body, arms folded across his chest, chewing on his bottom lip. Every few moments he seems to start to speak, before some other thought suddenly and hurriedly arrives to take priority.

“Got herself involved in some business that wasn’t hers,” He says, finally. “Did the right thing for the wrong reasons, ended up all turned around with nowhere to go except down.”

That makes me pause for a moment, hand halfway stretched out to retrieve the rubber gloves folded over a nearby table edge and eyes narrowed from behind the surgical mask stretched across my face. “People make poor decisions as easily as they find ways to make those decisions their last.”

Terryl nods. “Surely do.” After another long pause, he sighs. “She had a kid.”

“Perhaps she should not have gotten involved in … Business that was not hers?”

Drumming his fingers against the hollow steel table nearby, the Detective pushed out the inside of his cheek with the tip of his tongue. “Think that’s how she got involved in it to begin with. Got cajoled, antagonised. Wasn’t thinking clearly.”

Snapping the plastic down across my wrist, it is my turn to shrug as I pick up a shining silver saw and bring it to whirring, momentary life with a teeth-grinding, ear-splitting screech until the motor relaxes and the cutting disc slows to a lazy spin. “She is not thinking at all, anymore. Is there anything else I can help you with, Detective?”

Terryl looks at me for several long moments, before shaking his head and tugging down on the brim of that threadworn fedora. “Thank you, Ma’am. Just wanted to see it with my own eyes.”

“See what?”

He turns away. “See what happens when you start something on someone else’s behalf  you can’t finish.”


[The Rapture]

You are the wrong Miss Johnson, but that is okay.

It is a difficult thing to face down a superhero. Not simply because of their fantastical powers, which makes direct physical confrontation foolish – I have already learned that to my painful cost. No, they are made mighty not by their strength of body but by their strength of will. Towering resilience and titanic robustness which makes them impervious to the trifling concerns and worries that afflict mere mortals.

They endure with the kind of mental fortitude few others possess. It is what makes them mighty. It is why your wife, Keira, has become the only individual to (think they) have stopped me. Contrary to the belief of the wider Bombshells’ Division, that was not my first mistake. After all, it was a close-run thing, I think. Perhaps if the vagaries of fate had shifted subtly to either side, I would be the one looking down on your domestic bliss from a position of Champion.

No. My first mistake was not in striking your wife. It was in not striking you.

Laying siege to something imperious is a waste of blood and treasure. Instead, I should have worked to undermine the foundations. File away the mortar between blockwork until the structure sagged and struggled. Hollow the bones, make cancer in the blood. Sicken and enfeeble, until the way is weak and a brutal hole can be blown through the fragile mess.

You are that weakness, Keira. While you waste time with delusions of relevancy, desperately snatching slithers of success brought to you on a plate in a pinion from the kitchen by the World Champion, reality comes threatening to call. You matter because of the second component of your hyphenated surname and nothing else. While Roxi stands untouchable, you are barely noticeable. Indeed, that is why I have taken such a keen interest in you and your baby boy …

It astounds me that not being content with extant weakness, you would develop new ways to make you and your wife vulnerable. A family? Such a curious investment in a line of work hardly famous for making such units viable. While you make-believe a story that does not end in you being forgotten, you do my work on my behalf.

Why should I strike Roxi head-on? Why not look to slip a subtle blade between her ribs when her attention is elsewhere?

Your boy means nothing to me. Another slack-jawed imbecile waiting for scheduled indoctrination into a valueless, meaningless society. You treat progeny as if they are some wonderful miracle, rather than a base biological instinct. Please forgive the disrespect if I do not personally congratulate you for rutting. He means nothing to me.

But he means everything to you.

And now, through him, I have you. At Climax Control, every choice misery I inflict on you is gifted to your wife, our World Champion, by proxy. Regardless of her incredible strength, fortitude and bearing there is no armour of faith that can repel the gut-churning agony of watching someone you love suffer … And I promise you will suffer so very greatly. This is not some Machivallian scheme to distract or confuse. I am simply going to hurt the wife of my upcoming opponent and through that, weaken her. Poison her.

All it took to make such a thing possible was to exploit your pointless desire for relevancy. To be front and centre, to be noticed. To be seen. In this singular aspect, I have gifted you what it is you most want.
Have you thought about what it would be like to be the Johnson of interest? Of primacy? How many times have you watched your own reflection in the shining metal visage of the Bombshells’ Title and wondered, idly what if that were me? Tantalising, forbidden. Sinful, but of course it cannot. It can never be, not while Roxi holds such gold.

Unless, of course, she did no longer.

Does the thought not excite you? That through no direct fault of your own, your wife might simply come off second-best. You could still go home together, have another fat child, grow slow and feeble and old together and then – when the lights were off and the bedframe rattles to her baritone warbling – you could dream about pursuing the Championship.

If I take it from her, I promise to give you such an opportunity. Would you like that? The chance to become someone again?

All possibilities lay through me, Keira. I am not asking for something as crass as betrayal. I am not sure what love is, but I know it is a powerful, toxic thing and there is nothing I could offer you, directly, to persuade you to do anything that would hurt your wife’s chances. No, not directly.

But I did not have to offer you anything, directly. I simply had to create the possibility. The chance that Keira Fisher-Johnson would once again be a name synonymous with excellence and not as a superhero’s sidekick. It must be so tiring, to have all your hopes and dreams, wants and desires, fears and dreads boiled down to something simplistic against the towering presence of Roxi.

It must be very draining. At Climax Control, I will help you on this first step towards rediscovery. To remember who you are. 

Your boy means nothing to me. Of much more interest is a simple number. SIxty-nine days. That is the transitory, fleeting period of your sole time as Champion. Barely two months’ worth of relevancy, within which you were the first name on smiling and snarling lips alike. It must be a powerful drug to remember as you pack your fat child’s rucksack for school, or step over scattered toys. To remember a time when you stood mighty, like Roxi. But apart. Strong and independent instead of mewling and weak.

Your desperation radiates from you in palpable, furious waves. It slips between gritted teeth, and all the world and its people can see you are anything but content. Domestic bliss by any other name, painted in bright colours but a nightmare nonetheless. This is not what you dreamt of; this is not where you want to be. But you pretend so, because to do anything else is to admit to the undeniable truth that you are simply not content to act as a doting, supportive wife.

You hunger for glory. It makes you swoon to think about such success – makes your knees tremble at the thought. Perhaps now, as I think more fully, I am not the masterful tactician I believed myself to be. Perhaps it is not me playing some complex strategic game … But you.

How hard did you pursue me, Keira? Or was our matchup one of random chance or smart corporate planning? Is this simply some stunningly complex way of carefully manoeuvring yourself back into prime-time competition? The idea is certainly alluring. That you would risk your family for the opportunity to be someone again. To recover the identity that remained yours for only sixty nine days.

To put your own son at risk as a tool to further your own success is an act so brazen I cannot help but respect it. Understand it. They are such a burden, children. Why not make them work to your advantage? Use them as a weapon to get what it is you want, even if you cannot quite bring yourself to admit that truth aloud.

Keeping such truth inside must be difficult. The urge to share the burden with your dearest, though they take the form of your trouble and strife is a twisted irony. Have you talked this through? Perhaps during one of your inane gym sessions where fresh meat is prepared for consumption by those who would not hesitate to do what needs to be done? Perhaps the next World Champion that succeeds where you failed will emerge from your doe-like collection.

Still, I wonder how Roxi feels about all of this. Did you consult her? Did you ask her permission? Do you need her permission? Is it difficult to obtain sufficient time in-between her moonlighting crimefighting, and title defences? When you are struggling with homework and temper-tantrums, is she throwing flailing ne’er-do-wells through breezeblock walls and saving the poor, huddled masses? Does that make you feel worthless? Forgotten?

What does it feel like to have forgotten how to be someone? Is it gradual loss of self, marked by confusion and irritation or a singular collapse of everything which makes you … You? When you bent over to retrieve the pieces of lego cutting into your foot, did you catch a glance at your reflection and struggle to recognise the person staring back?

On Sunday, I will face the wrong Miss Johnson, but that is okay because through your foolishness, your tempestuousness – your desperation – I will have access to the only one which matters. The one with the gold. The one with the relevancy. The one who managed far more than sixty nine days.

Do not try to band the wound to staunch the flow of poison, or reach for some anti-venom. Jealousy is a toxin so potent there is nothing which can dilute its power. It wears away the strongest bonds; undermines the mightiest foundations. Already it manifests in furtive glances, subtle disagreements. Outright and willful disobedience. I think it has already started. Hollowing out the bones of your relationship, making it thick and turgid. Bloated by a desire to be an equal partner in a pyramid that only grants one person room to stand at its summit.

The simple reality is, of course, that you have never been good enough. Your record is an effective summary of that, coupled with brand recognition taken from our resident superhero and masqueraded as your own. Even if you could have such a chance as to reach a cumulative seventy days, it would only end in disappointment. Divorce.

But that is not how jealousy works through the blood. It whispers sweetness, not reality. There will come a time when it finishes burning through your livelihood and in the shattered remnants of all the terrible mistakes you have made … You will see that truth. But by then, it will be far too late and everything you have ever loved will be lost.

In the meantime, however, I want you to be furious Keira. I want you to be wrathful, and vengeful, because while you are raging you are not thinking. While you look to hurt me, you are not focused on who you hurt in turn. You are nothing but an attack vector by which the impassable gates that mark your wife’s title reign can be bypassed. Black iron will stand and resist even while the flames lick between the grates from the inside. Everything she has built will burn courtesy of the dissident, the saboteur working from that safe and secure inside.

Did you ever conceive it would be you who would bring her down? While the rest of the world winds up for another classic superhero vs supervillain, they will ultimately come down disappointed at the manner in which the right Miss Johnson will finally, mercifully fall.

I am still going to face the wrong Miss Johnson, but that is okay. I am so very much looking forward to meeting you.

Welcome to the Rapture. There is a special place inside it reserved for those who betray the ones they love for their own selfish trysts with gold and diamond.


[The Past– Atlantic City PD Headquarters, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA]

My mouth works open and closed, but I can’t push out the words. Mostly because my mind isn’t sure my ears heard correctly.

I suck in a breath and force my voice to the surface. “Chief, you can’t be serious.”

“Does this look like something to joke about?” He snaps. A powerful man, he folds his arms over his broad chest. The thick, wiry moustache over his top lip quivers in displeasure.

“He’s a fiddler!” I shout, forgetting my place. “At least two kids, maybe three! What do we need to do to put him away? Catch him with his d--”

“Watch your mouth Fexxfield!” The Chief roars, cutting me off. “I’ve been doing this twice as long as you and if you think I’ll sit and listen to some wet-behind-the-ears, badge-polishing, shirt-starching newbie dictate to me the morality of the Law then you best put your gun on the table so I can shoot some sense into you!”

I turn away in frustration, tearing the fedora from my head and throwing it down onto the tabletop.

Running a hand down my face, I stretch out the skin. “But … Why?”

“David Steel is one of the biggest philanthropists this city has ever known,” The Chief begins. “He gives millions of dollars every year to a whole heap of charities, and to the city. His name is above at least three of the largest orphanages in the downtown area, and the brand new radiology ward at the City Hospital. He’s one of the Mayor’s biggest campaign donors and if that wasn’t enough for you, he’s majority shareholder and CEO of Steel Industries. That’s the biggest employer in the tri-state area. Headquartered here.”

The Chief sighs.  “Let me spell this out for you, Fexxfield. Let’s say we put Steel away. Immediately, we freeze his personal assets and every cent of those millions of dollars that would almost certainly have gone to any number of good causes goes bye-bye. He’s replaced as head of Steel Industries by someone who isn’t from this city, isn’t a champion of the area or its people and all of a sudden, we’re looking at major restructuring and job losses.”

“The Major loses a critical financial sponsor and suddenly, can’t compete with the slick opposition campaign funded by big businesses that are a whole hell of a lot less interested in this City and what happens to it beyond lining their own pockets.”

“All this upheaval,” The Chief grunts. “Even if the City could cope with a huge rise in unemployment and a pro-business Mayor who doesn’t care for much in the way of food stamps, which it can’t, it certainly doesn’t have a few tens of millions of dollars lying around to take over orphanages, or pay for the upkeep of new hospital wards.”

I shake my head. The inside of my mouth feels dry. “So we’re saying the well-being of a few kids, their livelihoods, that they’re not being …” I can’t even bring myself to say it. “ … That they’re not being abused, is secondary to everything you’ve just said?”

The Chief slams his fist down on the tabletop, his chin quaking with rage. “Of course it is! Open your eyes and play the percentages! Are you genuinely asking me if three, four, six, maybe ten kids are worth turfing thousands of them out onto the streets? Firing untold numbers of blue-collar workers? Closing hospital wards? Where do I stop?”

“You don’t need to like it,” He barks. “You just need to accept it. I don’t need you to do anything--”

“Just need me to do nothing? Let evil triumph. Right?”

He shakes his head, the anger draining away. I can see he’s just as conflicted as I am. maybe more so. The Chief chews the inside of his cheek, before turning away. His voice waivers.

“We’re helping tens of thousands of people here, Terryl, they just don’t know it. The only price we’re being asked to pay is our own integrity, self-respect and morality. I think it’s a price worth paying? Don’t you?”

I don’t answer, but my silence condemns me to agreement. At least for now.[i/]


~*~*~*~*~

"I can’t lie ..." Cassie said eventually, a long silence finally broken as she ran a thumb across the smooth metal she held in her palm. "I’ve thought about this more than once; I even dreamed it. Stepping out from behind a desk, doing something more than just making appointments and herding cats that like to hurt each other for money. Something better …”

She closed her palm around the platinum band, features rising up to lock with the man opposite, who reached out to take her hands in his. "But not like this," She sighed, expression pained. "Never like this."

Cassie rested her weight against the edge of that same desk. "I suppose I don’t need to ask your opinion? The disapproval is just about cut into your face with a breadknife. Guess you’d like us to take your kids, go home and never speak of any of this stuff again?"

Folding her arms across her chest, the blonde shook her head. "I don’t think I can just walk away from any of this; how can I look at this opportunity, wish it well, let it go and then somehow look at myself in the mirror? How are we supposed to look those kids in their eyes, teach them any kind of principles – the same one we’ve just betrayed – and still look at myself in a mirror?”

“I’m not saying it's simple, but chrissakes, woman. Why you?” He asked, his expression twisting up. “Surely they’ve got plenty of people with the qualifications. And if this all starts now, before they’ve got that bastard locked down and hard? Why should you have to take that chance?”

“David Steel owns half this town!” She snapped, lips baring. “When he comes calling with an opportunity, you don’t just walk away. Nobody does – not if they want to ever accomplish anything of value ever again. I’m just sick of all of this, Clive. I want more. I need more. This is killing me.”

Cassie flexed her fingers. “It doesn’t matter; it only matters that our choices are limited and sometimes, there’s one option regardless of how much we might wish there to be another. Besides … I’ve not forgotten what that son of a bitch did to my reputation. I’ve not forgotten how he orchestrated my firing, my professional legacy tarnished. Just left to rot.”

“No amount of wringing our hands is going to make this go away. You can’t toss David Steel into a river or just make him disappear,” She shrugged. “He won’t be “locked down” or persuaded as it feels like you think he should be. Irrespective of what you think of him, he wields extraordinary power and he can’t be dealt with just by exchanging his thousand-dollar loafers for concrete proxies.”

“Well it’s a damn shame he can’t, because I can’t think of a person offhand more deserving of it,” He muttered, crossing his arms over his chest, and leaning up against the nearest wall. A mighty frown grew strong across his stubbled face. “So it’s like that? He says jump, you say ‘how high’, and that’s all there is to it? You get to throw yourself right back full into the one situation I’ve been trying to keep you safe from, and to hell with everything else? Because you don’t think they can use someone else, or you aren’t willing to let someone else take the hits on account of being told to do it first? Or is this on account of her? Abigayle? None of these people did a damn thing for you when she almost made you–”

He stopped there, not wanting to look any more petulant than he already was. He had done something. He’d done the only thing he was aware he could at the time, and done it without her knowing or understanding. Hadn’t told a soul. He’d taken the hits, taken the abuse, shrugged off the questions and damage to his own reputation and livelihood, and he hadn’t blamed her for it. Yes, there were those opportunities, but right now he was more concerned with the one he cared most about. Her.

A scowl passed over her features as she pushed away from the desk. “You’re being dramatic. This isn’t some pet-project, or out of hours freelance work. This could change everything for us. Finally let me stand on my own, be successful on my own. I’m so sick of being in everyone else’s orbit, reacting. Being pushed, pulled. Prodded. I’m so tired, Clive.”

At the mention of Abigayle, the scowl became something altogether angrier. Stepping forwards, Cassie brought her hand upwards, fingers forming an angry point. “You don’t have a fucking clue what you’re talking about. I’ve told you before not to mention her name and yet every single time I start to stir on the idea of doing something because it might just help me …”

She took a deep breath. “You don’t understand what happened, with Masque–with Abigayle. With everything. She’s unique. It’s tough to explain if you weren’t there.”

She could just about understand his reluctance; hadn’t Clive worked as hard as possible to provide what he could? Support her where possible, and do as any father should for his children? And still, though he understood the damage all this bullshit had caused – and she was just one person after all -- he seemed unable, or unwilling, to consider the damage that could still come to pass if they did nothing. If they just treaded water.

She couldn’t let it stand … Surely he could see that, even if he couldn’t accept it.

“Look,” He started, raising his hands in a placating manner. “I didn’t mean to insult her, I just was saying maybe, given … You know, your past and all … And how she’s … That maybe you were feeling guilty or something and with her asking, you’re more willing.”

It sounded as awkward as it felt, and he scrubbed a hand through his hair, uncomfortably trying to somehow make it better. Which of course, he couldn’t. Sure, he’d been around the block a couple turns, in a position of some influence at one time, but even that he felt was a fluke, and he’d never been comfortable with it. He wasn’t prepared for a sudden shift like this, wasn’t sure what all it would entail other than ‘likely ending horribly’ and however strong his lovely lady was, he was under no illusions of what the pressures of a man like David Steel could do to someone.

“You’re going to do this whatever I say about it, aren’t you?” he asked more quietly, looking over at her and trying to envision how this could go anywhere good.

It didn’t.

Cassie looked up and nodded. “ … Yeah.”


15
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XVI – Eyes of the Hurricane


[The Present – Oscar E. McClinton Waterfront Park, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA]

It runs off her in psychosomatic torrents that ride over the rainwater as it pools around stained, converse sneakers. I think I could smell it, if I were close enough, but from several hundred feet away it glows like some spectral filter applied over my senses. A twisting outline of colour in some strange, warped heatmap of feeling. She stands on the path and the minutes collect together to work their way towards an hour, chin tipped up to look at the storm clouds overhead …

If her eyes were open.

Clammy, slick skin shines under the mercury-ion glow of the streetlights overhead, all framed in red. She takes a single, awkward step forward. A limp, heavily favouring the right side.

I can almost smell it. Sweet and perfumery and uplifting like something wafted in on a sunflower, summer’s day high. Defeat. Surrender …

Acceptance.

There is not so much as a breeze to shift the thick crimson strands plastered tight against her face. The rain falls straight down to splash in fat puddles that soak through her clothes, her skin. Her soul.

At last, after years of wanton destruction and chaos – a force of nature unbowed – it has all come to a soft and gentle end. The hurricane has dissipated and left behind gentle sunlight. A few hundred feet away, a hand subconsciously cradling the surgically repaired musculature of her shoulder, undoubtedly running a thumb over the raised patchwork of scars made by a surgical knife but invited by my thorn-painted hand, Amber Ryan finally gives up.

The fight oozes from her, taken by the storm drains down into the sewers to mix with the run-off and the shit, and then out to sea to swim with the plastic. It is an indescribable feeling; the most potent of feverish highs that makes my only hand that moves without mechatronic components shake. I clench the fingers tight, breathing deep.

It had never been about destroying her. That was an impossibility. Even if I had killed her outright, the essence of what she was – what she is – would have simply lingered on in some ethereal, metaphysical sense made untouchable and therefore completely invulnerable. Short of death, no liberal application of a tyre iron could have achieved what I am now revelling in as I watch and feel. Bones can be reset, tendons reattached. Wounds closed.

What is permanently damaged can be cut away and replaced. Metal in exchange for meat. The plastic phalanges of my prosthetic cycle in serpentine fashion, whirring and clicking at the thought.

No, there is nothing that cannot be repaired, or replaced. The physical is not where the war to destroy someone is best waged. It is not enough to hurt them.

You must force them to acknowledge the futility of continued existence. Of resistance.

And now, at long last … Because I have worked so very hard and waited so very long – My once-Resplendent Hurricane, the irrepressible Amber Ryan, succumbs and surrenders. She yields to me and it is a thrill beyond measure.

For a moment, it eases all my own aches and pains, and there are so many now. Pain builds upon more pain, as all the exploits of my life begin to weigh down on one another, bowing the floor of my resolve until it threatens to collapse in on itself. This is the cost of what I set out to achieve so long ago, the price to be paid in full. The House will not be denied, after all.

For a moment her head snaps right and aligns with mine. Her eyes focus and for a few seconds, I think that she might see me. It is an illusion, of course. From so far away in the dark I am indistinct in the concrete spans and steel trusses of this miserable, rotting city. Even if she did, there is no fight left in her to do anything with such a provocation. Slowly, gingerly, painfully, Amber turns and begins to limp up the shallow hill and the winding path that crowns its top.

It seems strange that here, in this communal park filled with rose bushes and drug users and sordid sex pests, is where the Queen Pin makes her final move. No fanfare, no appreciation. No chants of YOU DESERVE IT … Nothing.

Just tears in the silence and the rain.

It is so sweet a song, and I am so very glad to have heard it. Goodbye, Amber. You were always my favourite.

It is only as I turn to leave that someone else catches my attention as she steps out and into the streetlight opposite. Huddled in a thick coat drawn in around her insubstantial self, I can recognise her from the clack-clack-clack of her heels against the concrete without having to pick out the red accessorization and immaculately styled, coiled hair.

Miss Cassieopia Mearns stands to the side of the Broken Hurricane and the pair exchange a look. Amber continues on and as she passes, Cassieopia’s hand gently touches the small of the taller woman’s back. They move away, up the hill as one.

How unexpected. I should have pushed her off that bridge myself.



[The Rapture]

This should be so straightforward for you, Miss Vargas. No real, meaningful challenge at all for someone so experienced in the ways of physical violence and its associated suffering. The illusion has been dispelled; the curse is broken and the Kingdom saved from the terrible fate that awaited it.

I have been defeated. Surely, now there is nothing more to fear? My reign of so-called terror is at an end, its back broken by a sometimes superhero, sometimes super-sleuther. The Internet Championship torn from my plastic grasp, the World Title likewise all too briefly in my orbit before being accelerated out of sight on some new and dynamic course. It seems almost as if this use of your time is wasteful, insulting.

There is nothing more to say about me, is there? Without the allure of my so-called record and the prattling of mewling lambs arguing over who first should go to slaughter, there is just a painted composite face and empty rhetoric. They will all line up now to take their vengeance on me, now that I am vulnerable. Weakened. Soft.

… Or will they?

Did you read her words yourself, or did they reach your ears second-hand? The Age of the Painted Hurricane is over by her own free will. Tell me, did you ever think you would hear Amber Ryan surrender? Refuse to get up? Embrace ignominy? There are few who did.

But I always believed she could be broken. Not physically, but spiritually. Nothing lasts forever, as the recent voyage of the Sun Princess established, but there is no need to endure for an eternity. All that is necessary is to survive long enough for entropy to do its destructive work. I did not need to defeat Amber – I simply had to survive her and let the fundamental laws of the physical universe pick her apart on my behalf.

It is difficult for me to put into words how satisfying it is to see a cornerstone of my legacy laid underneath a shining sun in its bright, blue sky. A marker that will stand for all time as a testament to what I have achieved that not one other person on this planet can lay equal claim to.

I broke her and now she is nothing.

And yet, there are others here who threaten to follow in Amber’s footsteps. Powerful metaphors, who walk these awful streets and insist on refusing to turn a blind eye. Banners who, in the right circumstances, could become embodiments for all the hope and misery piling up in this sad little world. People like you.

People like Miss Johnson.

I am sure you understand that having plunged a knife into the heart of this company and twisted, I cannot allow life-saving first aid and the possibility – however unlikely – of survival. There is not enough strength left in me to do this all again. I cannot risk my legacy being upturned by someone else who decides to embody all the things she did.

How easy do you expect your victory to be, in the sweltering heat of Jaipuri? Now that all of my mystique has been so effortlessly stripped away by our World Champion, will there be much left to so casually defeat this Sunday? Perhaps it will give you more time to play to the masses, extend out my decline to their whooping, hollering applause.

Tell me, Miss Vargas. Do you think I am easy prey because of the reputation others built for me?

These record books recorded facts. Nothing more. I did not claim superiority; magnificence or superhuman abilities. Unlike Roxi, I cannot fly. There are no such things as monsters, because they are only terrible people doing monstrous things. Just people.

I am only a person. No bogeywoman with magical powers beyond a penchant for inflicting misery on those who go out of their way to invite it. Those who fell before me gather together and flinch at the mere mention of my name – as if it has any power or influence. They croak and they whimper about the doom that awaits any who dare to face me and yet, as you saw only a few short weeks ago, there is nothing supernatural at work here.

I am no longer the Internet Champion. I am not the World Champion. I can be defeated. There is nothing for you, for anyone, to be worried about.

Isn’t there?

But I think, perhaps you feel it stirring. Not the end of my work, but only the close of its penultimate act. A great and long intake of breath before the final, beautiful exhalation. You have come to join me this Sunday, Miss Vargas, on the very edge of my vision made manifest at last. It is almost time. It is almost here. My Rapture is so close now, that I can see its spectral, multicoloured shine with my eyes squeezed tightly shut. It is so beautiful, I feel like weeping.

Tears in the rain.

Contrary to popular belief, rumours of my demise have been greatly exaggerated. No exorcism of SCW has taken place, and I am neither driven from this place like some mad spirit or somehow rendered impotent because of the events of two weeks’ previous. It is true to say that in some small patch of the Pacific, when we were finished inflicting violence upon each other, I did not get up again …

… But it is equally true to say neither did Miss Johnson, and I am not finished with her.

My Heroine can wait a spell, to quote a Gumshoe who has apparently chosen to likewise refuse to stay dead. Thoughts must focus on what to do with you.

This is not a story of redemption, and I am in no need of salvation. So many eyes are on us an entire subcontinent away in Jaipuri, pensive and thrilled. A few are not sure I will even appear, as if some wicked spirit barred from the stadium; surely like salt has been spread in a great circle around the open-air stands. Others expect some righteous, rageful fury to come tearing through in a whirling dervish of mindless destruction – to reassert my strength and prove I have not lost some imagined step.

Neither of those things will come to pass, because I have nothing to prove with such meaningless gestures. Hyperbole is for actresses, and I have no interest in standing on cutout balconies, making paper kisses and reaching for a painted moon. There will be no dramatic return, no point to prove or example to be made out of you.

This is not a story of redemption, because I have not lost anything. The desperation is not mine, Mercedes – it is theirs. Can you feel it? They so fervently hope this is the end of me, will it with all their collective heart. As the dust curls up in lazy coils to touch the sky and clears, they hope against hope to see that I am still sprawled on the floor, still. Quiet. Gone.

You are not a sacrifice, offered up to help me prove a point. You are simply their unwilling Champion: elected to a position by hypocrites and weak-willed fools who lack the vision and strength to do what they so desperately wish for you to do.

They did not support Miss Johnson, because she is World Champion and almost equally as derided, hated. Resented. They could not bring themselves to do anything other than watch in grudging hope neither of us would leave the Sun Princess under our own motive power. But now? Now they are thrilled – because here is someone who can be backed openly without challenging their own childish games of power and influence. Here is someone they do not perceive to be a threat to their own dream-like visions of the future and what it might be.

How does it feel to be elevated to some unwilling position as Monster Slayer? It does not serve me, or you. Only those who would not so much as dare to speak my name into a mirror, on the off-chance my plastic face appeared over their shoulder when they blinked.



[The Past – Columbia Heights Apartment Complex, DeWitt Avenue, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA]

“Congratulations …”

I snort something noncommittal, concentrating on the difficult job of climbing to my feet and walking the short distance across the dressing room without moving my neck. Left hand clamped across my shoulder, I grimace at the intense numbness that rides across and down my arm.

Making it over to the sink, I rest my weight on my hands and stoop my head over to lap at the running tap.
Footsteps echo behind, but I stay focused on just drinking. Another twinge fires from somewhere in the small of my back and I subconsciously cup it with a single hand. The silence crosses from being palpable to uncomfortable.

“Are you okay?”

“Do I fucking look okay?” I snap, groaning as the reaction to stand to my full height achieves nothing but flooding my consciousness with pain. Suddenly, whatever’s left of my control dissolves into fairydust and dreams and I slump down to my knees. I’m not quite fast enough to do anything but crash the side of my head against the edge of the sink. Instantly, my vision brightens until I can’t see much of anything except light.

Something darker steers into view, giving my eyes blessed relief from the blinding brightness. The blur descends until it’s close enough to resolve into a face. My nostrils flare, and I drink in the perfume wafting my way. Smells like flowers …

“Cassie … Have I ever told you …”

Her voice is pensive, unsure. “What?”

I laugh, trying to lift my head up from the floor before instantly regretting it. “You smell great.”


She scoffs, pressing one of her hands to my cheek. “Are you okay?”
“Do I fucking … Look … Okay?” I chuckle. Awkwardly, I shift onto my side and begin the laborious process of standing up. I feel Cassie’s arms at my waist, helping take some of my weight from my feet.

“Good for Roxi,” I mumble. Everything attached to me suddenly feels very heavy indeed. “She needed that.”

Cassie frowns. “Do you want me to get a Doctor?”

I shake my head, swatting at her arm with mine. “I’ll be fine. Just got dropped on my head really hard. Always feel a bit groggy after a match.”

“Everytime?” She asks.

“Mostly,” I shrug. “Some are worse than others. This one’s somewhere in the middle.I think they’re getting worse.”

Suddenly, a horrible thought pushes itself through the miasma of my confusion. “I’m getting old.”
My vision clears a little and I can make out the expression on Cassie’s face, even if I can’t read it. “Nothing lasts forever …” She sighs.

She helps me to sit up. “I’ll be fine,” I grumble between gritted teeth. Fuck, everything hurts.

Suddenly, I feel fingers interlacing with mine. I frown, but this oddity is swiftly forgotten by what the young woman opposite is about to reveal.

“You can’t go on like this; especially if you’re going to follow this road all the way to the end with Masque. If you don’t adapt, Amber … You’ll die.”


~*~*~*~*~

Throwing my rucksack over my shoulder, I send the door crashing open with the flat of my boot. Ignoring the aching in my hips as I twist, my pace quickens. Somewhere behind me footsteps echo, and one of SCW’s foremost talent managers, an absolute picture in cherry-red, is giving chase.

“Amber!”

I don’t slow down, instead I turn the corner, put my tender shoulder against the heavy double-set door and force it to swing open with a creaking that steps up to a clang as it crashes hard against the wall. The cold night air prickles my skin and I struggle to suppress a shudder.

The full brilliance of a crisp, cloudless night-time sky shines down upon me and for a moment I slow to a halt, tracking familiar constellations with my eye. I’m brought out of this brief moment of contemplation by a hand on my shoulder. I spin around, shrugging it off with a snarl.
Cassie’s features are passive, almost emotionless. That’s new, and gives me pause. “You need to grow up.”

“Are you for fucking real?” I spit. “Just who the fuck do you think you’re talking to?”

She doesn’t react. Already I can feel myself losing control of this, this whole dynamic feels off somehow. This isn’t how she usually is. “Why do you take it so personally?”

I could say something back, but silent fuming seems more appropriate.

“The way you throw yourself into this …” She continues. “Why does it produce such an effect in you? You’ve lost before, lost a title too, and Roxi’s one of the best in this business. Why?”

My eyes narrow, my voice dropping to something harsh and guttural. “I don’t like to lose.”

“I think we both know it’s more than that,” Cassie almost-laughs. “Just like last week. At one point you were totally content with how all of this was going to play out, like you knew what Masque was planning – as if everything was under control. You told me to trust you, smiled as if it was all worked out and assured. Cool, composed. I guess when I think back … It didn’t really feel like you.”

“Less Painted Hurricane, more Styrofoam rain … Then suddenly, she pulls your strings in some new and subtle way, or someone mentions your name in a less-than-complimentary fashion, and you’re all-in. You fought in that match like your life was on the line, when in the wider scheme of things, it was just about making it all last another day. What was at stake? A number? Three hundred and sixty? You’ve never cared about records or what anyone else has done.”
 
I step forward, right into her personal space. I’m almost nose-to-nose. “You don’t know the first fucking thing about me. You better walk away before you’re carried.”

“I know more than you think,” She bites back, not a single sign of acquiescence or fear in her eyes. “You’re a creature of feeling, pushed and pulled by what others say, and driven to react. Despite all this stuff you’ve done to stay at arm’s length from Masque, it hasn’t worked. You’ve not been complimented or made stronger by it, you’ve just existed in spite of it. You’ve ignored every piece of advice I’ve offered. Just like you’ve ignored your own body telling you it’s time to pick and choose your battles, not fight one every time someone so much as mentions your name or some spectre with a plastic face riles you up with talk from the pulpit.”

It’s my turn to frown. “Great psychoanalysis, did you–”

Without warning, she slaps me. Hard. What the fuck is happening right now. Who is this woman, and what have they done with a Flower Girl Named After the Stars?

“It’s boiling up inside of you about now, isn’t it?” Cassie taunts. “All you can think about is me; teaching me a lesson, proving you can overcome anything I say with action. Applying overwhelming force to the miniscule provocation I’ve provided. That’s why eventually, you’re going to lose; your rematch against Roxi;, your legacy. Everything.”

“I don’t care about legacies!” I shout, my fists balled and my face flushed red where it isn’t already courtesy of her sharp palm. “It’s not all about what you leave behind, or what others think of you!”

Cassie folds her arms across her chest. “If you didn’t care about what you left behind, you’d have gone already. Walked off to chase fireflies. Not giving Masque another opportunity to take you down, not going up against Miss Johnson before you’re ready.”

“You don’t think I can beat her again?”

She shakes her head. “I think you absolutely can … If you’re smart about it. Not like this. Not like you’ve let this coming match shape itself. All the while in the background, Roxi’s been willing herself, training herself, driving herself to this singular point. She’s already learned everything there is to learn about Amber Ryan. Now she’s analysed you, evaluated you … And she’s ready to put what she’s learned into practice. Meanwhile, you’ve stood still, eyes anywhere but where they’re supposed to be – turned inwards instead of looking out.”

“… Or exploding at people  who don’t pose any significant threat. You’re one of the greatest Bombshells in this company’s history. You chose to let Roxi reign, pick your time carefully. Wisely and yet … You’re the one chasing people to places they want to take you. Expending all this tremendous energy for absolutely no gain.”

The anger in my veins starts to cool, giving way to a sort of horrible, hot helplessness. Here’s a youngster with less fighting experience than winters under her belt, and she’s outputting sage advice like she’s been around the whole world twice for good measure. “What the fuck do you want me to do about it?”

“Be smarter. Stop taking trips to places you don’t need to go to,” Cassie says simply. “Stop feeling all the time, and start thinking. Otherwise you’re going to start losing more than a title. Worse.”

Blowing out my cheeks, I glance up at the stars drifting overhead.

Time for one more trip around the moon.



[The Rapture]

It is so important to me that you do not feel undervalued, Miss Vargas.

While others have appointed you as their Champion by virtue of a quirk of scheduling, or the vindictive agenda of this Company’s carefree ownership – they would have supported anyone drawn to exchange miseries with me on the Indian Subcontinent – I see you for the individual you truly are. No ulterior mission, except perhaps to maintain self-respect. I suspect your only real motivation, this Sunday, is to demonstrate that you are not some integer value in an equation to be ignored while the complexities are modelled and the answer derived.

You wish to be recognised in your own right. A Hall of Famer, no less. To do anything less is disrespectful, and I am not like them.

I promise to give you my most undivided, fullest attention. Our interaction will not be about restating goals, or challenging expectations. There are no complex games to play here, or ulterior motives to tease out from the rubber-necked gawkers who leer and clap their hands and hope for an ending in which nobody stands when the dust has coiled up to hang in the storm-tossed sky.

There is no reason to denigrate you, or critique you. Why should I? In a company full of liars, false prophets and the deluded, you may be the most honest woman to call herself a Bombshell yet. Even the much-vaunted Amber Ryan could not always see the truth of things, but it feels like you do, and that is why I must dispose of you with much professional regret. Because, although I have no ego to service, no agenda that demands a restoration of the artificial fear others bestowed upon me, my own work is not yet complete. I cannot stop here, so close to completing my Grand Design. Not now.

Just a little further to go. I need you to help me just a little further.

In Jaipuri, we will do something very special together, something this company has not seen in so very long. We will be honest – utterly, completely. Truly. Free of all the detritus and distractions, we will come together and gift each other our very choicest miseries and see who has the most special talents for inflicting suffering. I think you will show me something wonderful, independent of your unwilling elevation to become this company’s impromptu David.

But, of course … I was never Goliath. None of these things are true. On Sunday, there is no advancement of any cause; no step along some pre-ordained road. The Road to the Rapture does not lie in Jaipuri, so we will take a walk away from it for a while, together.

After all, do I not deserve it? Have I not done you and all of the Bombshell Division a favour of such incredible value? I have retired Amber Ryan – I have taken one of the most powerful forces this company has ever known and throttled the will from her. Broken her not physically, but spiritually. Is the path to all the golden trinkets and championship accolades not that bit more navigable because of the works I have wrought?

It is a miracle, made by my thorn-painted hand. I should be congratulated, thanked personally. Where is Roxi? Her reign is that much more secure because I have eliminated a potent challenger, one who could have taken that title back from her at any moment of her choosing.

Instead, I am ostracised. Vilified. For what? Because I am different? I have done so much for everyone here – those who could not have hoped to face down such a power and emerge intact. Alive. Instead, they can watch from the balconies and know when their fleeting moment comes before being crushed into insignificance, it will come some arbitrary time interval sooner for one the removal of a painted roadblock which would otherwise have destroyed them utterly.

No thanks. No appreciation. Instead, I am made to feel shameful for my difference. Such puerile behaviour. I do not think we will experience such a thing on Sunday.

As I think on it further, I see our meeting as one of reset. Renewal and rebuilding. We can cast away our preconceptions together, Miss Vargas. Take all of the suppositions and ignorance of those who should know so much better, and simply enjoy the arbitrary moment that this otherwise miserable company has gifted us in some faraway spot on the other side of the world.

This is a chance for us to cleanse each other of the worst sin of all: complacency. Now is not the time for self-doubt, to question all the things we have achieved. Instead, we should refocus and believe in what we stand for more strongly than ever before. I think you will help me so much, and I am willing to pause my works, suspend my grand design for a moment, to let you help me achieve that.

I am so very much looking forward to meeting you, Mercedes. I think the Rapture can wait a while.



[The Past – Oscar E. McClinton Waterfront Park, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA]

I’m full of fatigue and alcohol and right now, I don’t know which one is kicking my ass harder. Every single step I take is some enormous, deliberate effort that feels like I’m crawling up a hill backwards. Having started the evening with a very deliberate set of plans, everything’s degenerated to no more complex a night than trying not to throw up all over my shoes. I’ve never been one to struggle for distractions, but now I’m worried too many have piled up one on top of each other.

Stumbling to a halt, I rest my weight against the railing and just concentrate on breathing. All I can hear is the relentless thunder of the rain as it crashes down hard against the concrete, and my own heavy breathing. My warm breath escapes in a billowing cloud that warms soaking skin for a fraction of a second, before evaporating into nothingness. I roughly push a palm through my sopping hair, forcing the tangled red mess back and up from my face. My eyes drift down towards my feet, drawn by the countless dancing droplets of rain as they bounce and splash on the pavement. Almost imperceptibly, a tinge of something crimson mixes with the water running free from my chin.

Touching my fingers to my nose and mouth a little too forcefully, I grimace in pain. Slowly I bring the trembling hand away so I can see the skin painted with watery blood. The rain, the pavement and the wider world threaten to start spinning and as the strength in my legs evaporates like so much hot breath in the air, I stumble and sink down against the damp concrete.

Resting my head back against the railing, I tilt my face up into the rain.

A voice interrupts my confusion. “You’re an hour late.”

I can’t open my eyes without wiping all the water away, but the tone is unmistakable. So young, so suddenly, uncharacteristically self-assured … So new.

My voice croaks, barely more than a whisper. “I got held up.”

A delicate arm reaches underneath me and despite my protestations and whining, I find myself levered up and back onto my feet. My lips move but there isn’t even enough energy in my tongue to give the sharp barbs I’m contemplating a voice.

“Miss Mearns!” I cough, head lolling to the side. “I had no idea you were so strong …”

She frowns, and roughly pulls me forward. “Just walk. It’s not far.”

With her support, I succeed in the incredibly complex task of putting one foot in front of the other, successively. It’s not much …

But it’ll have to do for now.


~*~*~*~*~

Something soft and warm brushes across my face and instantly, my fingers find the responsible throat nearby and close sharply around its windpipe. My eyes – slowed by weariness and booze – are still only a moment behind and they snap open, focusing on Cassie hovering in midair over me. She doesn’t move, and her own gaze is fixed on mine. She doesn’t seem to react beyond growing a little more flushed as her lungs work harder to force air through the narrowing I’ve created with my hand.

Slowly I release my grip, let my head return to the pillow underneath and sigh. Long and hard.
“Sneaking up on someone so you can give them a sponge bath is dangerous,” I mumble. “You can never be too careful what they’ll want in return.”

“Sit still and shut up,” Cassie snaps. Even through the haze of my cotton-wool stuffed head, I have to admit … This version of Miss Mearns intrigues me so.

I grimace as she moves quickly but gently around my face, wiping away the blood that’s dried and caked about my split lip and streamed free from my nose. The warm water still feels sharply cool against the contusions I can feel swelling my face and although I can’t see their blue and purple hues, I suspect they’ll leave a mark.
All-too-soon, she’s done and sits back. “So what did you get up to?”

I shift my weight slightly, wincing at the unpleasant feeling of numbness that arcs through my lower back. “I told you … I got held up.”

“You got held up …” She clarifies, “Or you held someone up?”

I shake my head, pressing the hilt of my palm against my forehead. “This was entirely defensive.”

Cassie sits up slightly. “Someone attacked you?”

“Not exactly,” I mutter. “He said I looked like I might enjoy a good time. I took that to be an insinuation I’m easy, and construed that insinuation to be a verbal attack on my honour and chastity. So I defended myself. I’m a married woman, after all.”

She shakes her head, amusement and irritation evident in equal amounts. “He hit on you?”
I nod. “I hit him back.”

Reaching over towards the table that’s next to the couch I’m sprawled out on, Cassie retrieves a glass of something amber-coloured and strong smelling. That’s my girl.

“I didn’t think you’d come.”

Tipping the glass back, I purse my lips at the burning aftertaste. That’s the good stuff. “I said I would, didn’t I?”
She shrugs. “You’ve been a bit absent as of late.”

There’s not a lot I can say to that. I settle on a shrug.

“No-one’s seen you since … That exchange with Masque.”

“Uh-huh.” The exchange. Is that the euphemism we’re using now? The hug heard around the world. The hate embrace. I chuckle at that little play on words. She doesn’t like that.

Gritting her teeth, Cassie snatches the glass from my hand and sets it down on the table with a hard clack of glass-on-glass. “You weren’t serious, were you?”

I roll my eyes, “About what?”

“Stop fucking around!” She barks, all traces of playfulness purged. “Buying into her bullshit. Embracing it. Acting as if she was right all along!”

I turn away from her, burying my face against the pillow. “Why the fuck not? What have I got left to lose?.”
A silence settles over us, seconds becoming minutes.

“I don’t understand this …” Cassie sighs eventually. “I’ve never seen you act this way. Not over anyone else.”
A laugh escapes my lips, laden with sarcasm and bitterness. “Masque isn’t anyone else.”

There’s another silence. Suddenly, Little Miss Mearns makes her move. “I never thought I’d see you scared of confronting someone. Fighting them.”

Instantly I launch upwards, all pain forgotten. Pressing my body against Cassie’s I force her back until she’s pinned down on the cushion. Eyes narrow and teeth grinding together, rage boils free from every pore in my body.
“I am not scared of fighting Masque …” I hiss and I know she believes every fucking word.

We’re almost nose-to-nose now. “I’m scared of what doing that means. For me. For you. For everyone.”

Sitting up, I swing my legs away and stand. “Every single time someone wants to fight me, I make them work so hard for it that they always come up short. I’m not just talking about winning because as good as I am at that, it’s not like no-one around here has managed to put me on my back long enough to score a pinfall. That’s cute, but it isn’t the most important thing. The most important thing is getting back up, carrying on where I left off. No-one has been able to put me down around here permanently. Not a single man or woman has what it takes to swipe my legs out from underneath me, and leave me utterly spent like some empty shell casing. Scrap brass on the rifle range to be collected and thrown away.”

Gingerly I cup my bruised cheek with my hand. “I don’t know if Masque can, but something tells me she just might. It’s hard to describe. It’s not fear. I know I’m not scared of her. I don’t know. Maybe it’s because I just don’t understand her. Her motivations. It isn’t money, or power. She seems so alien. Unknowable. Makes me hesitate. And somehow, she just seems to know how to push my buttons when everyone else is staring at the control panel, scratching their heads and flicking through the instruction manual. That’s before you even get onto the subject of a rematch with Roxi …”

“I give everything when it comes time to the fight. Absolutely everything. It’s why I was World Champion for almost a year. I’ve become synonymous with excellence, with effort and application. But it wasn’t enough last time, was it? Stopped at Three Hundred and Fifty Seven.”

I turn around, spreading my arms out wide in open question. “So tell me, Cassie – tell me what the fuck I’m supposed to do when I know, before the bell has even rung, that it might not be enough? I’ve fought Roxi so many times the individual experiences have blurred into one long ass-kicking and it always ended the same. Or used to. That last time though … Things have changed …”

“She’s still the same person you put down all those instances before,” Cassie counters. “I’m not sure who this is really about. Her, or Masque.”

I shake my head. “Both? Neither. I don’t fucking know.”

“So what are you going to do?”

The question hangs long and heavy, pregnant with foreboding.

I slump back down on the couch next to her, resting my head against the backing. “I thought about leaving, just getting in a car and driving. After all, what else is there to do? Especially given what’s in store for me moving forward with the plastic-faced timebomb I’ve gotten into cahoots with. I don’t have a fucking clue what Masque’s really up to.”

I fix my gaze against Cassie’s. “Do you?”

“It doesn’t matter,” I continue, interrupting her reply. “Even if you did, denying it or even admitting to it won’t change anything. I have no idea what’s going week-to-week. I’m filled with rage against her on Monday, beginning to convince myself she’s the only one who gets me by Thursday. What part of this is supposed to make sense?”

She frowns, “You think it’s a trap?”

“Yes!” I snap. “No? I don’t fucking know. Maybe I’ve outlived my usefulness to her, or maybe the whole Bombshells’ Division senses a change in the air and want to cast me off before I’m grounded on the rocks. The point is everything feels like it’s coming together to a critical point; a crucial and decisive moment. All these players, inputs into all of this, they’re all taking up positions and I’m in the middle. The only benefit to all of this is being surrounded, I’ve realised what I have to do.”

I glance over at Cassie. “I have to fight.”

“I have to fight just as hard, just as long, just as ferociously as I always have. If Roxi wants to cement her place as Number One in this company, she can go right ahead. If Masque wants to dispense with my services, by way of delivering revocation of membership privileges via her boot to my head, that’s wonderful. If the Harbinger of my Apocalypse itself wishes to grant me a preview of the shape of things to come …”

I puff my cheeks out. “I’ll walk hand-in-hand with her all the way to my beautiful destruction.”

Suddenly I shift my bodyweight against Cassie, and plant a kiss on her temple. She looks up with those worried eyes.

“I think it’s almost time for me to die, Miss Mearns … But not quite yet. I’m not dead yet.”


16
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XV – Gumshoes & Hand Grenades


[The Past – Princess Cruises Regional Offices, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA, Autumn 2017]
 

The corner of 47th and Atlantic Boulevard is where the American Dream comes face-to-face with its nightmarish inversion. A twisted parody. Some kind of metaphor for the hubris and arrogance of belief that goes with imagining the good times aren’t here because of some complex jumble of innumerable factors, they’re here because you worked real hard every day of your life and now you’ve earned them.

If this city needed some piece of modern art to encapsulate the death of the idea that hard work breeds success all on its own, it need look no further than the vast construction site stretching out in front of me. Trapped behind a rusting chain-link fence that creaks and groans in the breeze. Sat on tarmac made shiny by the patter of rain as it falls from the stormy clouds above, enormous hulking machines with scoops and drills sit silently. Between them are great piles of steel and concrete blocks, covered in tarp that flutters in the wind. Looming up in the distance is what’s left of a warehouse, the front smashed apart and reduced down to a pile of twisted rubble.

Reaching into the folds of my coat, I pull out a pair of black leather gloves and slip them over my fingers. From the opposite pocket I produce a pair of thick-gauge cutters and squeezing a section of the fence between its jaws, I clamp down hard. In the end I squeeze with way more force than necessary, and the links just bust apart as if harsh language alone would break them down. Like just about everything on the corner of 47th and Atlantic Boulevard, it’s for show. This fence is just an illusion of security, of some kind of order to things. It was never really meant to stop anyone with any real determination to get inside.

Someone like me. Terryl Fexxfield, Private Investigator and all-round good guy.

With a grunt and a no small application of elbow grease, I haul the fence line out just far enough to squeeze between the broken links and slip inside the yard. From somewhere behind me the headlamps of a passing car paint a bright spot against nearby pipework, a spot which begins to draw left towards where I’m stood as the car rounds the corner of the boulevard. Dropping to my knees I sweep the hem of my coat over my head and freeze.

For a few moments I can’t hear anything. Not the rain, not the roar of the car’s engine. Nothing. Then the wind whistles and I’m convinced I can hear the links I’ve cut chattering against the fence post. Wouldn’t this be a comical end? Smashed over the head by someone stood right behind, watching some lunatic cut his way into a construction site and then sit on the ground with his coat swept over his face?

Maybe it’s that redhead who caught me casing the place out the day before the night right now. She had a way of questioning everything with just a glance – threw me for a loop that pulled tight around my ankle and threatened to tip me and my world upside down. Amber …

That was a real pretty name. Seemed oddly disarming when fixed about someone as obviously quietly dangerous as her. In my experience, women like that tended to prowl the streets looking for some trouble to get into, and were just a little bit less concerned with how they ended up in it. Seemed to know a thing or two about this whole iron underbelly they were all just trying to avoid winding up dying in …

Eventually, I’ve run through enough silly scenarios in my head that I’ve spent more than a few minutes without being knocked for six. Throwing my coat back out from my eyes I glance over my shoulder. No headlamps. No car. Nothing.

Climbing back to my feet, I creep cautiously through the earth that’s been churned up by the construction equipment thundering backwards and forwards. Earth that’s become mud and if this rain doesn’t let up soon, mud in danger of becoming a quagmire. Sweeping out to my left sit a few small portable offices, their windows covered by heavy-duty bars. Ears straining for the first sign I’m not alone, I creep far enough along until I can get my hands on one of the large padlocks securing the door to one of the offices shut. A thick film of orange coats the whole of the face of the lock. It hasn’t been opened in some time.

Above my head a peeling plastic banner, bleached almost unreadable by ultraviolet exposure and time, proudly announces the future site of the east coast offices of PRINCESS CRUISES.

Not for me, personally. I prefer to fly.

Poking my head up towards the windows I steal a glance in. It’s empty, save for a table, a few chairs and the crumpled, browned remains of someone’s sandwich. Looks like one of Madeline’s finest. Grimacing, I wipe the excess rainwater from my brow. Sometimes I don’t even know why I keep that girl around.

An image of legs that stretch from there to somewhere high above the clouds flash through my mind. I suppress a grin and the urge to roll my eyes … At myself. I know full well why I keep that girl around, and it isn’t to make great coffee, sandwiches or type up my case notes halfway-right.

Isn’t even on account of the legs, because if Madeline ever had those it was probably photographed in sepia, right after the Japanese made mincemeat of Pearl Harbour. There was that redhead again. I roughly drag my damp sleeve across the top of my brow. She had a way of sitting on your mind without weighing all that much until she kicked out at your thoughts. 

Getting back to the task at hand, I move away from the offices and skirt the edge of a pyramid made up from huge steel trusses that look like floor supports. Enormous piles of building supplies are dotted all around the yard. Pipework, masonry, joists, fittings, just about everything you need to put a whole community down and sell off a couple of hundred dreams of owning your own home. I bet you could even find a couple of thousand ready to try for the chance.

Thing is, there’s not ever going to be ground broken here. No model home, no concrete statues of lions or big cats or something that gives the estate an inspiring or grand title to make part of the address line. This whole place, all of the steel I’m standing next to, it’s as good as scrap. Every home that will never be built here is a testament to Atlantic City and the way it expects everyone to lead their lives.

Let the good times roll … And when they stop, that’s your problem. This city parties fast, forgets faster.

While the cash was flowing and paving every part of this whole boardwalk with green, the question wasn’t should you spend it, but why haven’t you spent it already? New Tech Start-Ups, Holistic Fitness Systems, Organic Health Retreats, hot cars and fast women with bleached blonde hair and skin browned under ultraviolet. Only some square, some kind of conformist talks like the good times don’t last forever and points out even the sun doesn’t shine twenty-four hours a day. Nobody wants to hear that kind of thing when they’re in the middle of summer.

It wasn’t just construction that went crazy, but all those other things are long gone. Looking around here is like being in some fevered anarchist’s pot-fuelled dream. Once the bubble burst the men responsible for all this either left the city, or ended up in its morgue after being cut down from the rafters of the luxury house they’d just had foreclosed by the bank. Probably the same bank that’s trying to work out what to do with the raw materials and equipment for a couple of hundred houses no-one can afford to build, let alone buy.

Eventually, I spot my prize. The one I’d come to scope before Amber interrupted me earlier. A big earth-mover painted bright yellow, smeared all over in diesel oil and concrete dust, perched on top of a mound of dirt. As I scramble up the slope my legs sink into the mud, each step a sickening squelch as I have to pull my feet free with help from my hands. Eventually I’m close enough to grab on to the enormous machine and pull myself up onto the side of its caterpillar tracks. Stepping over thick hydraulic lines that snake off to connect with the giant rusted bucket swung out on the end of its arm, I wrench open the flimsy door and climb into the cab.

It stinks of oil and leather. Kneeling down on the seat in front, I make awkward work of reaching underneath, my hand blindly groping for something I’m not even sure is there. Maybe Miss De Lune doesn’t need my money anymore. Maybe she does, but just straight-up lied about this. Outside the wind whips up something fierce and steelwork, tarp and all manner of industrial equipment starts to shudder and squeal.

Odd lady, that one. Had plenty of clients lean heavily on discretion – was about the only superpower most of them had when up against some of the evils they faced. Still, she took it to some whole new extreme that bordered on the kind of habit that had put poor Cherry Blossom in a freezer just a few short days ago. Never met someplace that wasn’t stocked to the gills with shadows and places to keep out of sight; permanently in relief like some kind of walking, waning moonscape. Didn’t even know her first name. Doubted the last one was real. De Lune …

Still, she paid in something more than credit for the bank to get bored rolling out and promises that counted for nothing out here in the mud and the shit. So here I am following up on her lead. Her source. Cherry Blossom’s lead, I guess. His source.

My heart skips a beat for that poor, miserable bastard. Skips another one just to make me feel bad for how little I really did to help him do anything but what ended up killing him. The rain makes an irregular drumbeat of droplets on the excavator’s oil-smeared windscreen. About the only thing this city has in surplus, bountiful resources are sad stories. And rain.

I’m just about to curse out loud and decide to invest in my sources more carefully in the future when my fingers close around a cylinder taped right underneath the seat. The cardboard is stamped PRINCESS CRUISES in embossed red lettering. A little way along towards the end is the name of one of their ships; SUN PRINCESS. Tearing it free, I bring the tube up to my eyes and pull the cap from the end. Glancing inside, I whistle and nod. That’s the charm. Right there. Kicking open the door of the cab, I leap right out and land in the mud with a soft squelch.

Ankle-deep and face-to-face with a six-foot bruiser who doesn’t look at all happy to see me.

He snarls and swings the heavy flashlight he’s holding in his massive hands. Instinctively I duck, leaning back just far enough that I can feel it tickle the unshaven hairs on my chin. Roaring with anger he tries again, but I’ve already gotten to work on pulling my feet free from the mud. He’s two steps behind thinking that far ahead and before he can close the distance, I have just enough freedom to drive the flat of my shoe into his belly. He doubles over and with all the strength I can muster I throw out the palm of my hand and catch him right in the nose. It explodes in a burst of red.

Off-balance, he teeters backwards into the mud. In the melee I’ve dropped the cylinder and sweeping down to snatch it back up, I glance over at the fence and the car idling on the other side of the hole I made. Pushing through the broken links is another figure clad in a suit, but he’s too far away to make out any detail. At this distance, I can guess he means to do me a physical displeasure. In the light from the car’s side lamps I catch the glint of a gun in his hand.

I need to get out of here.

Unfortunately, in the time it’s taken me to do all this looking, I haven’t been doing any running and before I can put down some serious shoe leather, the goon I’ve just finished toppling reaches up and grabs a rough handful of trouser leg.

I succeed in shaking free, but only at the cost of falling over face-first into the mud. Ice-cold water flows into every intimate part as I splutter, coughing up thick rivets of brown as I scramble back to my feet.

Breaking into a run, I make for the hole in the warehouse wall. I don’t dare glance behind me and see whether that gun’s being trained on my head.

A whole bunch of names whirl around inside while I’m trying to keep it firmly attached to my shoulders, courtesy of that sneak-peek inside the tube. De Lune. Princess Cruises, a ship called Sun Princess and the sister of poor, poor Cherry Blossom. A former employee of theirs by the name of Cassieopia Mearns.



[The Rapture]


My Heroine, close only counts in gumshoes and hand grenades and you are oh so close to where you want to be. The spotlight diffuses out from where it shines down, making the inky blackness all around that piercing cone a tantalising grey. If you could only take another step or two forward, the heat from the filament bulb overhead would flush your skin warm and then finally, blessedly, you would be centre stage. At last, you could be the main character to your own story.

How long have you toiled now to be allowed to stand out from a crowd all scrambling – jamming desperate fingers in each others’ strained faces – to be distinct and independent? Recognised, envied. Focused. Even now, as Bombshells’ World Champion, you are somehow playing a supporting role to everyone and everything else. Your entire world goes to sea together, and trapped in a hull of steel, painted cold white and pristine blue, all they can talk about is what happened to Amber Ryan.

All they can focus on is the titanic struggle between her Husband and my Songbird.

What will the woman with a plastic hand and face do when she assumes supreme command of the Bombshells’ division?

It must be very aggravating to supplement some small aspect of the wider world with everything that you are. Back bent, broken a little maybe, with the weight of expectation somewhere else. They tread on you without ever looking down to thank you for all the fine work you do carrying that load. A structural member, a base on which to fix all those beautiful, shining accoutrements.

You are so close to being up there, breathing the rarified air of being someone. Your story to be told, with no reference to hurricanes or raptures.

Perhaps now, you know how “Steve Walker” felt, or Henry, or Vincent, or any of his fifty million facsimiles and hidden pseudo-personalities. Just a name without a face or a story of their own … Until you discovered the truth hidden underneath a mask. How tantalising, to think there could be something so important just waiting to be uncovered and shown to the world. After all, what is the purpose of a superhero if not to unmask and reveal such truth?

I wonder what you would give to show the sun-drenched promenade deck of the Sun Princess mine? What if I promised to show you it? Would that be reason enough to watch the small hours of the night give way to the morning, hunched over your terminal, interrupted by Keira’s occasional protestations or VISION’s calls? That world you work so hard to hold up seems to be passing you by, Miss Johnson. I think it is time to look up from chalk outlines, small, wet piles of human meat and cryptic mediaeval mysteries and spend a little time in it.

After all, if you do not enjoy the fruits of your success now while you still have them to marvel at, how will you feel when they have been taken from you and repurposed for some newer, grander design?

And yet, to bask in one’s own success … To take a few moments to feel the unmistakable warmth of satisfaction in your achievement and validation … That is not the way of any hero, is it? They measure their existence only in productivity; a scale of efficacy in the vanquishing of evil and the evil people who do those things –  forever focused on the impossible task of righting each wrong without so much as a second to enjoy that accompanying right which passes them by. Instead, you toil relentlessly in pursuit of a mission impossible even for someone with the incredible powers you possess.

Perhaps I was wrong to compare you to Amber so thoughtlessly, before. You are nothing like her. She did not appoint herself as a saviour to anyone, incapable even of saving herself from the fate that befell her. You, My Heroine, define yourself in those absolutist terms. The moral bedrock of SCW and the ethical lynchpin: a singular point where the tesseract of all our thoughts and feelings and ills and wills come together and are held together by your incredible will.

Amber was a force of nature, with no rhyme or reason or tiller or rudder to steer her by. You survived her, but you could not change anything by doing so. You simply lived another day. Oh, but you are so different, Miss Johnson. Here, we come to an altogether different conclusion. To survive you is to change everything because of what you represent. Who you are.

The heart of a hurricane you carry over your shoulder, taken from a chest that still aches for it to return from a damp hospital bed.

I have heard some say that being a hero is a great burden. That the strain of your power presents such a terrible weight, to be so uniquely equipped and able to help all those around and yet still be restricted and constrained by something so simple as time. Not enough seconds in the day to lend aid to everyone who needs it. Not even a means of triaging; no time to think. Just act. Save as many as you can. I have heard some say there is nothing more painful than having the strength to stop anything with only enough time to stop something.

What if I told you I had a different theory? Your burden is not that you are a hero, Miss Johnson … It is that no-one else is. To be constantly surrounded by such detritus, such human trash – fit for nothing but mewling and rolling in the shit, begging for help from trouble brought about by their own weakness … It must sicken you. To bring such great power to such meaningless interventions, because they do not know any better.

They know better, My Heroine. They just know that you will save them from themselves. Make their lives immeasurably more convenient. Comfortable. I am sure Detective Oliver cannot help but nod at the contribution you have made to the furtherment of his career, his safety and security. His success. It must be wonderfully reassuring to be able to follow a superhero into a room knowing your weapon is drawn purely for dramatic effect …

Why then even bother? None of these people are worthy of you. Why not use your powers for those that deserve it? Those that would benefit from it. To each according to their worth, not their need. Why waste time combing through the gutter for something of value when you can tip your chin up and spend your time watching stars? The sky is so clear at sea.

Besides, it is dangerous to walk for too long looking at the sidewalk. Makes it difficult to sense when something wicked comes along …

Does the stink of it all not disgust you? It pervades everything; clings like stale sweat, engine oil and burnt plastic. The smell of fear that lingers on these corroded streets, under the sickly-yellow glow of rusted streetlights and high-rise blocks. This iron underbelly rots from the inside out, and with every hole that appears in its orange-coat structure something new and terrible slithers out.

But still, you walk it. Searching. Trying. Sleuthing.

You remind me of another gumshoe – one who could not fly. He had no superpowers, except perhaps, the ability to listen. He heard a lot, and that made him more powerful and capable than he ever really understood. Unfortunately, he made the mistake of falling in love with a force of nature, and a hurricane came and smashed him to pieces in a terrible storm. What a sad ending.

Not an ending you need to share, because I have stilled the storm and dissipated the hurricane. All this tumultuous sea we find ourselves cast adrift on is made quiet and smooth like glass under a slice of the Moon. There is only a smattering of starlight, you, and me.
 
This company is your underbelly; seedy and sickly and in desperate need of saving. It is riven with corruption, bleeding and filled with woe. It needs you so badly, so completely … But it does not deserve you. It is time to turn your face away from all of this and embrace what really matters.

It is time to take what is yours, My Heroine. Surely you feel the urge? A subtle pulling from somewhere deep inside and tied around your waist, shining in burnished silver and stone? That insatiable thirst for recognition, respect. Adoration. Why not extract it from those miserable faces? Your transformative ways have done nothing but create a learned helplessness, an air of expectation. Help us, they beg.

It is time to become transactional. What will they do for you, now, Miss Johnson? What a wonderful thing, to be able to take what will never be freely given and make it yours. And it would be so easy for you to do. All it takes is a single moment of acceptance, a turn of the head and a simple word.

No.

Why not try it?

Your fundamental argument is as loud and abrasive as your choice of costume and yet when it is examined with even cursory detail, it shows nothing but bright, empty colour. The apparent streak that you and others award me, based not on my words but your increasingly desperate assumptions, is inconsequential. You assign motivations I have never espoused; claims and tricks never made or performed as you build some caricature of the lady in the mask and spend your energy challenging it. Not me.

The Internet Championship I took from Miss Hernandez and in doing so became the most dominant bitch on the high seas, is inconsequential. It is mine because in the process of hoisting Andrea up to dangle on the end of her own hubris, legs flailing and kicking for purchase in the air, it came into my possession. It is mine in spite of the things I have done, not because. A consequence, not an end-goal.

I am not the one with anything to lose here, My Heroine. You are.


[The Present – MV Sun Princess, Western Pacific Ocean, Summer 2022]

The first high-heel, ankle clasp whipping in the wind, gets launched on some ballistic trajectory taking it clear of the starboard side of the promenade deck and tumbling off into the brand new night. The second meets ocean top in a more measured affair; winding up being dangled over the edge, just dropped until it disappears into the tumbling froth that licks and crashes against the side of the hull as it cuts through pacific water.

Then, she steps up onto the lowest rung of the railing and shivers – warm, sensitive skin of the arch of the foot meeting cold steel. She leans forward and closes her eyes. The wind whips up some more, stirring that long blonde hair which starts to whirl and twist in the eddies.

I could wait a little longer, give her some more space, but if she reaches much further forward the injection of my dulcet tones might send her tumbling over the edge by accident. Could well still do so deliberately, depending on how the next few minutes go.

“Lovely night to contemplate ending it all.”

Instead, I’m the one surprised. She doesn’t jerk in shock. She doesn’t react to the interruption at all. Remaining perfectly still like she always knew I was standing there. Maybe she did, and I’m just losing my touch.

The blonde turns to look at me, and there’s no mistaking the suffering in those eyes. “How’s Amber?”

“Been a lot better,” I shrug, levering off from the orange-painted plastic of a collapsible lifeboat stowed behind. “Still alive. That’ll have to do her for a spell, until she learns to be grateful for it. Name’s Terryl–”

“Fexxfield,” She interrupts. “I know who you are. What do you want?”

The tone of her voice is abrupt, hard. To a point so sharp it might cut you down to bone if you lingered on over-explaining. Those eyes though … Those eyes don’t marry up. Betray the truth of how torn up she is. Watering from something that stings harder than salt and brine on the wind. “Talent relations,” I reply. “Help. Honestly? Little bit of good old-fashioned revenge.”

She leans back, stepping down to the decking. “You can’t stop her, Mister Fexxfield. Masque …”

“Pardon me, Miss Mearns, Cassie, but the fuck I can’t.” 

Something that might have been the barest fragment of a smile ghosts across her face; a subtle twitch but it’s an instantaneous signal which transmits intent. There’s still a little fight left in there, somewhere. It’s not a question of whether she’ll help now, just how long it’ll take to get there. And that’s okay, after all …

… We’re on a cruise, and the seafood bar does a great Crab ala King. “Care to join me for Dinner? I want to talk to you about your brother … Cherry Blossom.”

The sound of the slap she delivers against my cheek beats out the whole pacific ocean.


[The Rapture]


It gnaws at the pit of my stomach, and I am tired of the absurd rationalisations you make to justify the fear you feel when you look at my composite face. The words you pin in my name have never left the cutout which frames these lips – this image of me crafted as some boogeywoman for the company to fear and malign; it is not real. It is no more real than your ability to fly, or interrogate multiple personalities on a whim of one of yours. The aspect of your personality sufficiently deluded into believing that you are righteous. You are just.

Look port and starboard at the bustling rows on Sunday and understand that there is nothing for me to prove. I have emerged from nowhere, and set about eliminating every single fool eager enough to rush where not even Amber Ryan would tread. They have all stepped in my way with various delusions or points to prove and all – every single one – was dispatched. Put down. Taught the error of their ways through the liberal application of such sweet suffering. I have emerged from the darkness down in the belly of the ship’s engine spaces, where thickset pistons crash and generators thrum and crackle, and I will slip back into the darkness where horizon and shoreline meet with no fanfare or procession. That is my nature.

Of or related to the Moon.

You, Miss Johnson, have so much to prove. So much doubt. I exist because of the acts I commit and the things they lead me to, from one unto the next with no rhyme or reason beyond the fact I will it. I want it. It is how I found this small pocket of pain inflicted in return for money, masquerading as a legitimate business interest; how I became so feared without ever claiming a basis for justifying such; why I am called a Champion for the simplest of all achievements – doing as I say I will do. Nothing more.

But you? There is a complexity underlying you, My Heroine. Such a convoluted path that has taken you to the World Championship and then away from it, a zig-zag, a spiral which turns Moebius Strip and turns in on itself. Who are you really? Beyond such painful metaphors as superhero alter-egos and masks. Perhaps the more interesting question is who do you really want to be?

I think there is another personality hiding within you, too. One that is alive with self-gratification and desire. One which clutches that title belt into your chest as if it could pass through the ribs and take its rightful place in lieu of something beating. Surely, by now, you feel the poison of it? Leeching the morality from your bones and turning them hollow – a malady of the spirit which makes the high road seem just too high to take all too often.

Every woman to hold that accolade has been infected by it, riddled with it. Not a single one has resisted its charm or its toxicity and emerged unchanged. Until now.

Until me.

I do not want to be Bombshells’ World Champion because of the recognition. I do not want to be praised or grudgingly respected or even explicitly sought out to take something precious from my thorn-painted hand. No, I will take it from you because it is the heart of an entire division; the soul to so many, and in my grasp it will be a blinding light that attracts all and sundry. They will crawl over each other, hurt each other – kill each other – for an opportunity to fall at my feet.

Is that not beautiful? To be killed by your own ambition? It will be such a wonderful thing to see them all try.

And you will try, too. Because the poison is an addiction that leaves the blood singing for more. A virus that leaves the body with some irresistible longing to be infected again. This is the culmination of everything. The completion of my works, and your rebirth corrupted into a form of my choosing.

Because while all heroes must fall, so they can rise again, I wish for a different and new beginning. I will rework you, in a fashion that better pleases me. The longing that will consume everything inside you when I take that title is not my doing – it has consumed so many others, including my Diminished Hurricane – but I will use it to my advantage. My pleasure.

And if you resist? If you are foolish enough to make some martyred last stand?

Coastguard cutters will comb these rolling seas for a thousand days and never so much as find a trace. Social media campaigns will dwindle until a handful of die-hard, dedicated followers with attention-deficit and unhealthy fixations share the same tired images of a former World Champion. The company, the world, everyone, will all move on.

You wish to know what is behind this so-called smoke and their mirrors making the particulates glimmer?

A truth as equally revealing as the one you think you speak. Let me sit opposite you in some dingy interview room, soundproof tiles impregnated with the stink of stale coffee and old cigarettes. Shackle my hands together and to the table if it makes you feel more secure. It is time for you to accept the reality of your situation.

Your legacy is accidental. Right-place, right-time. You succeed because of happenstance and coincidence. Transitional. Interim. Wannabe, never-do. You talk with an experience all out of sorts with this world, a familiarity with distant lands and the oceans we cross in-between to reach them. On Sunday, above-decks, you will find someplace new.

You have never been here before, Roxi. Not with me.

The box you end up in will not be shipped home. There will be no multi-gun salute fired at angle over a casket, open-topped, within which you stare out peacefully and pale. No carnations will rest in a circle around a photograph of you in happier times, and Keira will never be given the opportunity to stifle her tears as the inane words of some plastic eulogy are drawled through the morning rain and humidity.

You and you medals will be bound with rope in a hessian sack, emptied to provide potatoes and root vegetables for the Sun Princess’s evening meal, and tossed aft mid-ship into the rolling seas with the rest of the detritus, the trash and the shit. Abandoned to the deep and timeless sea where, in whatever serves as the rest of your post-Championship life, you will join all those faceless peons who clamoured for your protection and benediction without ever so much as a stay acknowledgement in return.

… But you were right about one thing. You will hurt. I promise. This is not the start, My Heroine. This is the end.

Your end. Welcome aboard the Rapture.



[The Present – MV Sun Princess, Western Pacific Ocean, Summer 2022]


The repair has been completed to a high standard, but only if you do not know what to look for, or where to look for it. The large glass dome inset into the ceiling high above is decorated in stained-glass vistas of the sea, its gods and the strange creatures common to both but as I look more closely I can pick out subtle discontinuities. The panels are arranged in clockwise order like the segments of some unfurled, petalled flower but they are not all the same. Some are vibrant and bright, with glass blown and shaped almost a decade younger than their opposites. The older panes are chipped, where some powerful force has snapped and cracked against the surface and broken free chunks of thick paint to let in raw sunlight from outside.

I remember when it shattered, and the entire Dining Hall burned.

It is no longer a Dining Hall, of course. The ship has undergone a comprehensive refit since I last walked its gangways and bulkheads, and moving with the times this whole space is now a vast corporate entertainment space and conference venue. All around, stagehands bustle to transform it into the locale in which I will become World Bombshells’ Champion or finally grant the company the pleasure of seeing me defeated. My lips – free to flex in the wide cutout of the mask which only covers from temple to cheek – curl upwards. There are so many who would so dearly like to see the latter.

One of them has superpowers. The other cannot urinate without the aid of a catheter.

Heavy steel barriers are dragged into position to make a secure, crowd-controlled route from the grand staircase along towards where a ring will eventually stand. Heavy black curtains are rigged at the top of the winding way, cutting off the landing beyond. Soon it will be a place of violence and entertainment. Suffering, but not like I remember it.

“Should I ask?”

Matt Knox, My Songbird, the company’s current World Champion, leans back against one of the barriers. “Feel like whatever it is, it’ll be dark and fill me with regret for ever asking.”

I turn towards the nearest of the two entrances to the conference space. The one I had sealed closed to the thump of drowning, desperate fists-on-steel. A third of the way up the painted bulkhead I can draw a subtle tide mark; where floodwater has permeated the superstructure and then diffused back out even after the plaster and wooden veneers were replaced. Like the ship has remembered its misery and held onto it, in the hopes of reinjecting that pain back into reality, post-healing.

Like so many people do after suffering trauma. Even me.

“Reminiscing,” I answer, turning and making my way out. He follows.

“Happier times?”

I shake my head. He does not ask anything more for a while.


~*~*~*~*~*~

The pistons pause at the apex of their cycle – towers of machined metal twenty times my height and wider than the span of my plastic-to-flesh-and-blood hand. For a single moment, a fraction of a second, they teeter as if somehow the entire process might stutter and the engine roll back in reverse. Thermodynamics will not be opposed, of course, and the pistons crash down and compress. Thick black sludge pooling inside the combustion chambers detonates and repeats the entire cycle again. And again. The whine of high-voltage lines warbles above the repeated thump of hydraulic motors as the ship’s enormous rudder assembly is forced port or starboard be a degree or two, in response to commands from the Bridge far along aft and up.

There are almost no crew down here, even in the engine room. The heart of the ship. Sophisticated sensors monitor ten thousand parameters a second, reporting efficiencies and operating aspects to an automated control system which makes subtle adjustments. Manipulating fuel-air intermix ratios and standing voltage inputs more quickly than the eyes of a mere Human can detect the quiver of a gauge, let alone respond.

Here is raw power, tamed with cold and implacable logic. The machine endures, stronger than the meat which made it.

“They are looking at the wrong thing,” I say, finally. My Songbird looks away from the nearest thundering piston, still wearing a grimace at the din and noise.

“What?”

My eyes roll closed. “They are all admiring the splendour of the fittings. A stained glass Poseidon and his trident. The skill and consummate professionalism of the Captain and his crew. The King ala Crab. All of that is meaningless without power, without drive. Without strength.”

He looks back at the thundering machinery, and twitches. The fingers of his hand squeeze reflexively. “The heart.”

“The heart,” I breathe. “Without it, everything else is meaningless.”

He says nothing after that, for a while, except to encourage a passing steward with a question about why two passengers – one wearing a mask – might be loitering in the engine room – to ask it rhetorically and move on. Eventually, he asks what he has been waiting to enquire about since he boarded the Sun Princess for the first time and myself, the second.

“Was this your plan all along? The title … The heart of a hurricane?”

I laugh. Lilting, sing-song, and it makes him grimace again. “None of this was planned, my Songbird. You should know that more intimately than anyone else, or you would not be here right now. You would be free like your namesake. Does that not make it beautiful?”

He blows his cheeks out hard, running a gnarled palm across his tired face. “Roxi’s no push-over, you know. Worn-out or not, Amber was still the toughest woman in this division, and she put her down for that title.”

“Toughest? Present company excepted?” I reply. He shakes his head. “I’m not sure what you are.”

In the periphery of my hearing, something bassy rises in crescendo and the pistons begin to cycle faster as some increase in throttle demands more power. The smooth lines of the metal begin to blur as they whir and flash faster. The gantry we sit on shakes, as the whole frame of the Sun Princess struggles to dissipate energy the ocean cannot be convinced to take.

I lean against him, head resting on his shoulder. He stiffens. “It is not a matter of strength, my Songbird,” I whisper. I can feel him shudder in response. “It is a matter of choice. I am the villain in this story; the evil to be usurped. Conquered. Save the village, defeat the monster. Retrieve the relic … Whichever permutation of story, whatever the archetype – the result is the same. I cannot be allowed to endure, to go unchallenged. Miss Johnson must come to me.”

“She talks so matter-of-factly, as if I am no real threat because I only exist to be eliminated from existence. In truth, I am the one who provides her justification and reason to be. Without me, she is power looking for application; a rhyme with no reason to be. In a way, I am her heart.”

That catches him a little by surprise. “Seems a bit of a cardiac love-triangle to me. You’re her heart, she has Amber’s heart, you’ve had at least two inside you …”

His situation is difficult, and so occasionally he acts out. But that is something I would not change. “Heroes exist for only two reasons: because people like me exist. Monstrous people. Like you …”

He tries to ignore the implication, for a while. The moments become seconds but it is irresistible; a question that must be answered in the same way that the machinery in front of us, this enormous thundering heart, has no choice but to take its direction from on-high. From mere meatbags, wearing epaulettes and dining on crab. He almost succeeds. Close …

But close is measured in gumshoes and hand grenades.

“ … And?”

I lift my head from his shoulder, and find his eyes with mine. “ … And heroes exist to fall.”

 


17
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XIV – Princess Pretender


[The Past – Queen Elizabeth II Quay, Freetown, Sierra Leone, Autumn 2014]


Detonations turned torrential rain spectral shades of yellow and orange; burning out to throbbing red as thick plumes of choking smoke twisted out and up to cover the face of the Moon. Sound arrived a while later behind the lightshow – a staccato beat of muffled thumps and bangs as masonry shattered, steelwork sagged and reinforced concrete exploded into superheated powder. The unmistakable whistle of incoming shells coasting on ballistic trajectories made a discordant, shrill shriek as competing weapons struggled to out-scream each other, before burying themselves in city blocks and exploding.

Under cover of darkness and detonations and showing only her low-visibility running lights, the vast bulk of the Sun Princess crept closer to dockside. Swirling eddies spilled out from her midships and aft thrusters, sending wavetops crashing into the rotten pier running along the entire lengthway. She struggled to slow, with no tugs to guide what would normally be an unthinkable manoeuvre for a ship of this size and weight. Hidden below murky waters shifting with the touch of poisoned moonlight, a polar-white hull slid against the mudbanks of a quay almost too shallow to take such a draught.

The tops of spiralling smokestacks were briefly made into silhouettes by the flash of another series of brick-rendering explosions. Freetown had long since stopped thinking.

From along what had once been her starboard promenade deck – now crammed with urgently-erected canvas tents and stretchers – a single blinding shaft of light sprung to life, sweeping along the pierside as the massive ship crushed against the dozens of bald-faced, tractor-sized tyres hastily strung out as a buffer. Where the light swung past the centreline it briefly picked out an enormous red cross, hastily painted over a crisp blue colour scheme of the cruise liner.

Squeezing her rain-slick palms harder against the rail, Abigayle leaned over and glanced down at the handful of workers who braved shrieking rounds and booming detonations to manhandle a gangway into place; angling it up towards a solitary hatch that opened wide and spilled with the warm glow of the ship’s internal lights.

“Doctor De Lune?”

She nodded, without turning around.

“Isn’t safe up here, Ma’am.”

Nearby, a mortar buried its snub nose into the soft timber of a warehouse and blew it into thousands of splinters and shards. Chunks of burning wood span through the air, slicing power cables clean in half and where they fell to contact the ground, corruscating arcs of blue shorted out the lines and exploded the transformers they were attached to. Uncontrolled fires spread down the circuit, People screamed in the rain.

“It does not appear to be safe anywhere,” She replied. Finally manhandled into place, the dockyard crew scattered from the orange-coated gangway as quickly as they’d come together – leaving the Sun Princess tied to the side of a warzone. “We are not equipped for hostilities.”

A spindly man came alongside her, long neck gnarled with skin made tight by age. Serious eyes stared out from a pair of steel-rimmed glasses sat underneath a head shaved smooth.

He nodded. “Last military ship left two days ago; most foreign nationals are gone. Only the desperate or the greedy are still here. There’s nothing of value left.”

Abigayle raised an eyebrow, turning to look at the older, taller man. “ … Except the people.”

“Of course, of course,” He replied as he polished the lenses of his glasses with a handkerchief. “Except the people. Have you had a chance to check out the seafood bar?”

“The Sun Princess was a last-minute charter,” he shrugged in response to her bemusement. “There was barely enough time to outfit her for trauma work, paint a few red crosses on her side and set sail. Certainly no time to off-load some of her more traditional cruise-esque trappings. Besides, crab won’t keep long. Why not enjoy it?”

Droplets of rain ran clear of her forehead, tracking trails to meet at her chin. “I am not on holiday.”

He looked out at the blossoming explosions which lit up the punctured skyline of Sierra Leone’s capital city. Something in the distance cartwheeled in fire, and he thought he heard it scream. His jaw set. “No – of course not.”



~*~*~*~*~*~


They packed the corridor five-deep and she whirled and twisted, an intravenous bag held up high above her head. Some laid on gurneys smeared with blood – dried and fresh – and a fine layer of particulate dust kicked up by explosions, others were slumped on their knees against the walls. A few milled around, dumbly asking each other for help.

Behind her delicate dance, a stretcher wheeled through and at its head a brusque, meat-chested man in olive-green fatigues pushed clear a path ahead. The plastic tubing running bright blue stretched taught as she made better pace than them, but a swift bark of something unfriendly and a stumble made enough room for the gurney to squeeze through.

The Sun Princess had been moored at pierside for almost four hours and in that time, the ship had been filled to capacity and beyond by the sick, the dying and the dead. The latter had already hopelessly outstripped the tiny medical facility normally expected to treat stomach bugs and vertigo amongst geriatric holidaymakers, and were now rapidly filling up the meat storage lockers and anywhere refrigerated on-board. The last remaining dregs of seafood shared shelf space with the dead and bits of the dead.

What little space available to house those still clinging to life had been even more compressed after shrapnel from a wayward shell punched holes through the starboard-aft sun lounge – hastily repurposed into a triage facility – and cut three patients down with their attending doctor in a whirlwind of jagged metal and soft, soft flesh. After that, all the areas closest to the external areas of the cruise liner had been evacuated, abandoning precious breathing room for those choking on atomised concrete and pulverised brick.

Still she worked even as they reached what had been a cinema room only a few days beforehand. Thick, plush purple carpet raked with criss-crossing lines as heavy metal wheels squashed the piles flat; punctured by holes where rows of padded red suede seats had been ripped out to make more room. The air sang with machines and human misery – rattling ventilators and chests, restive cardiograms and furtive moaning. Abigayle moved from bed to bed: checking vitals, increasing dosages and occasionally pausing to shut off a display drawing continuous flat lines in lurid green monochrome.

She didn’t notice the difference between the automation and the people. Not really. They were one and the same, with one favouring metal and plastic over skin and bone but the rest was effectively the same. Everything was a machine with a set method of functioning outside of which faults and non-optimal operation occurred. Sickness. Restore the machine to its proper parameters, and it would continue to work as-expected.

People were no different.

“Doctor! Help!”

The orderly nearby pressed down on the oozing wound, only making the patient rise up in agony and buck against the drawn-up railings of his gurney. Blood pooled and then ran down to stain the sweat-slick sheets cherry-red, flowing in thick, fat ribbons. The man in the bed grunted, wheezed, and then collapsed back down against the mattress with limp arms.

Abigayle forced herself through a throng of walking wounded and elbowed the orderly clear of the side. Gloved fingers immediately pushed inside the shrapnel wound. Probing, searching. With her spare hand she snatched a spring-loaded pair of surgical tie-clips even as the entire injury disappeared under a sea of crimson. She pushed in deeper, until the capillary effect drew blood under the rim of her glove.

A high-pitched warble pierced the bustle as the monitoring equipment on a nearby bed detected an imminent cardiac arrhythmia. Craning her neck around, Abigayle looked for anyone more competent than the orderly to support.

No-one.

She glanced back further, neck straining with the effort, trying to capture the tracer on the green screen rapidly nosediving towards inactivity. Then she looked at the patient in the bed.

As an organisation dedicated to helping those in the most dire need, Doctors Without Borders frequently operated in some of the most dangerous, lawless corners of the world. Not unlike the city of Freetown that burned and exploded all around the Sun Princess right now. Regardless, it still operated like any private venture did – charity or otherwise – on money. Chartering cruise liners, paying for doctors, medical supplies, the costs were astronomical and with no payoff beyond a nebulous humanitarian good, only vast injections by benefactors kept the lights on and the painkillers flowing.

One such benefactor lay dying in the bed opposite. A victim of a weak heart overloaded by the excitement of being able to see people dying up close and personal. It was frowned upon, of course – no serious business would allow what were its effective shareholders to go wandering around the equivalent factory floor – but rich men were difficult to control. They wanted to see the suffering they were alleviating.

So here was, making use of the very facilities he’d bankrolled.

Abigayle looked at the pale, glassy-eyed face of the man bleeding out all over here. He was a nobody; some feckless refugee or government forces’ simpleton told to stand in a particular place and wait to die by accident or design.

Still, his was the greater need, even if he was worthless in the grand scheme of things. Triage dictated it. The Hippocratic Oath demanded it. Her oath.

She paused her search in his blood-soaked insides. Was it?

What were the ramifications? The loss of a wealthy benefactor would indirectly kill hundreds, maybe thousands with the resultant loss of resources. Did the man dying with her hands deep in his gut have something as valuable? His wide eyes stared up at the tastefully decorated spiral ceiling, offering nothing.

What good were words? The only thing that carried weight – importance – were actions.
   
Pulling free from the red mess, Abigayle snapped free the gloves from her hands and dropped them onto the side of the gurney as she turned and crossed the bustling room. The man with no means died a few moments after she turned her back, but nobody noticed.

She had probably saved with one life countless more. Wasn’t that more important than some arbitrary ethical standard? Shouldn’t results stand for themselves over and above the theory? Reality, cold and stiffening on a nearby gurney, would always trump some idealised vision of the way things should be, crafted by those who were not wrist-deep in someone’s insides fumbling blindly for a tear.

Shouldn’t the end justify the means?

This was all in pursuit of a better outcome. Something greater. A grander design.



~*~*~*~*~*~


The main dining hall aboard the Sun Princess was a splendid thing. A vast, sweeping, oak-railed staircase that widened as it gently sloped down against polished marble floors. The stonework glinted with shifting light courtesy of a vast skylight dome impressed with stained glass vistas of the sea, its strange contents and gods. Spotlights arranged in a widening spiral inset into the ceiling cast diffuse glows of cool blue and green against varnished panels of oak set into the wall spaces.

A splendid thing, filled to the brim with stretchers and groaning.

They were pressed in so tight together that the only way to pass between the beds was to walk side-on, staring at the nearest squirming, bloodied figure huddled underneath threadbare blankets. Nurses squeezed between, heaving soaking wet bandages into bright yellow BIOHAZARD waste sacks and dragging their contents across the marble. Others followed with fresh dressings and new saline drips, or just to check the still form lying prostrate, roll the eyelids closed and turn off the overhead lamps indicating a new vacancy. Orderlies came in tow, lifted the gurney and towed it away to make space for another.

Doctor Abigayle De Lune looked down at the impromptu fine dining and mass casualty ward from halfway up the grand staircase and frowned. This was simply all wrong.

All bureaucracies generated paperwork, and no organisation could move ships turned into hospitals with crews and medical personnel around the world and not be one. Even in the midst of the devastation of war, comprehensive records had been collected on every person admitted onboard the Sun Princess, and these included occupation, age, previous medical conditions and any number of useful metrics that would be used to inform treatments and future repatriation.

To Abigayle, they were being used incorrectly. Instead of being used to support treatment, they should have been used to decide whether it should have been offered at all.   

So much resource squandered on those with so little to offer. Retches, refugees. The unworthy. As she looked at each bed she found another reason to turn them away – send them back into the city where they could take their chances in the night and the detonations. Why were they here, risking their own lives to save those with so little to offer? What was ethical or moral about risking more to end up with less?

Difficult decisions were required in difficult times. It was impossible to save everyone–

Thoughts were blown clear of her mind along with the air from her lungs as the stained-glass dome overhead shattered with an ear-piercing screech. The bassy rumble of shearing metal drowned out the rising screams as the overhead lights flickered and died, plunging the dining hall into virtual darkness except for a handful of emergency beacons. Spinning red lamps picked out panicked faces in a ruddy glow as bodies moved and struggled. From the bottom of the steps, Abigayle clawed herself up to standing, fingers struggling for purchase against the bloodied handrail where flying glass had cut some of her exposed skin to pink ribbons.

She felt the water lap and stab at her ankles with its chill before she heard the torrential rush. It swept in, foaming and enthusiastic, through one of the large doubleset doors at the near end of the hall. Before she had time to wince at the freezing cold the sea had already flooded in over her calves and in the occasional flash of emergency lighting, she could see some of the gurneys – still occupied with the wounded – beginning to lift and bob with buoyancy.

Her nostrils flared with the stink of something acrid and hot, and she had only a second or two to throw herself into the water before the entire hall lit up like day in the afterglow of a sheet of flame that tore across the shattered ceiling space. Salt water stung her eyes and choked her lungs as she took cover, the skin of her exposed neck and upper arms singing under incredible heat. When Abigayle crashed up for air, spluttering and sodden, the water lapped past her waist and the entire dining hall burned.

Every step was an enormous effort of inertia, slowed by the billowing, soaked fabric of her clothes. Guttering flame made the surface of the floodwaters strobe and flicker, combining with the spinning beacons to make it hard to keep bearing on which way went where. She was dimly aware of other people crashing through nearby. Some were faster, others struggling to keep their head above the water but all of them were panicking. Illogical. Unthinking.

She knew exactly what needed to be done.

Levering herself around the fire-blackened door frame that led out from the hall, Abigayle reached up and tore open a service hatch marking access to the manual override for that section’s watertight door release. It revealed a yellow-and-black chevron-striped lever. She broke free the plastic security tags holding it shut, reached up and used all her slight weight to begin to pull the arm down. 

As the lever reluctantly travelled, she could see a large group of patients working to drag their sickest and most immobile number along the surface of the floodwater; travelling via impromptu floats made from rubberised mattresses torn free of the gurneys. A dozen or so were fifty, perhaps sixty metres from the doorway.

And then what?

Once the floodwaters were contained, the corridor beyond would be clear and those effortless floats would become useless. Who would carry the sick and the lame then? They would only slow her down; make needless delay on helping those with the skills needed to make a meaningful contribution. As if to support her analysis, the decking under her cold feet shuddered with another jarring impact, this time from somewhere deep in the hull. No – it was time to leave. 

She pulled on the lever harder and as it crossed some sensor point, a two-tone alarm began to blare. From a recessed lip above her head a heavy steel door began to drop, badly-oiled metal grinding on metal as thick dollops of hydraulic fluid ran down channels to mix with the escaping seawater and make it shimmer.

“Stop!” One of them called. “Please!”

She didn’t. The door continued its irresistible journey down and even though they doubled their pace, the weight of the sick and lame stopped the group from making any appreciable progress even as the water reached Abigayle’s armpits. The door began to cavitate as the motors worked hard to overcome the resistance of the parting water. A few of the most desperate, or brave – or both – disappeared beneath the water to make a last-ditch effort to reach the hatch before it sealed. None made it through.

With a deafening clang, the bulkhead sealed shut leaving the remaining seawater to continue through the ship aft until it dropped below her ankles and feet. She turned to leave, to report to the emergency rendezvous point, but the hammering of desperate hands against the other side of the door made her pause for a moment.

Just a moment.

She had already resumed her way along the darkened corridor while the banging still rang out, and she had disappeared from view before the last asphyxiated thumps trailed off.



[The Rapture]


Do you feel the anticipation? The hushed whispers around catering tables and the well-informed online dialogues? Even the most vacuous backstage makeup artist cannot help but look towards the promenade deck of the Sun Princess with gut-trembling interest. It is almost time for me to finish what I started in SCW only a few short months ago. All I have to do is deal with a hero who thinks they stand for more than they are.

All I have to do is teach another gumshoe a lesson about letting their heart rule their head.

Heroes are the product of great literary works, because the written word predates virtually all other mediums. I wonder, Miss Johnson, if you are familiar with a particular piece by Christopher Booker? He believes that in all the sum creative writings of the entire English language – thousands of years and billions of words – that there are really only seven different permutations of a story that anyone can truly tell. That anything else is merely variation and originality is set at a limit of a half dozen plus one.

I wonder what kind of hero you could play in each of those seven archetypes? Since the job of the protagonist you have apparently appointed yourself to with tenure fits you so well …

Overcoming The Monster:

She carries a potent and truly mythical relic – the heart of a hurricane, taken from the most powerful storm to ever scour the lands clear of resistance and opposition, and with it she sets out to face down and ultimately defeat the greatest threat her beloved realm has ever encountered. Something faceless named after the Moon, made from plastic and pain which has relentlessly defeated every adventurer or errant wanderer to date.

I think this is my least favourite of the tropes you could use as a vehicle for your heroism. It is so unimaginative. So derivative. After all, this is the closest of all seven to reality. While there might not be such a thing as monsters, there are monstrous people and I have populated a long list with those who would be quick to agree that I meet such a definition. Each of them started out as plucky would-be warriors once upon a time, eager to cut down a symbol of fear and liberate their people from its malign influence. All it takes for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing.

Unfortunately, in this case, there were no good people. Only self-serving, paper mache challengers arranged in roadblocks and dispatched like chaff reaped and spat clean to drift on the winds. Oh, how I triumphed. Their names are afterthoughts – De Salco, Benton, Zdunich, Jones, Beaufort … Dust to occlude a windscreen for a few moments before the road ahead reasserts itself and the way forward is clear again.

Perhaps here, my Heroine, you could carry a small measure of guilt for your part in allowing the monster to thrive. While I stalked the soft underbelly of SCW, cutting and eviscerating at will – did you see how I made Chloe weep for my mercy? – you were focused on taking a hurricane’s heart into your possession. Reclaiming a relic you had thought lost for all time because you can no more fight weather than you can fight yourself.

And yet, you found a way. Somehow. And while you were taking it, and changing the course of her fate forever, I was left unrestricted and unbound. You have claimed to protect those that needed protection, and yet I do not remember seeing your face when they carried Miss Beaufort backstage on a stretcher. A hollow hero at best, a mere monster-slayer at worst. Trinkets and treasures over people.

No, I do not like this story much at all.

Rags to Riches:

Of all the archetypes, this one is the most intoxicating because it speaks to anyone who has ever worked to have something from nothing. I imagine it is one close to your heart, My Heroine, whenever you walk through the doors of your gym and see Kiera instructing another gormless trainee to tuck their chin.

Do they not understand that they will take a clothesline on the mouth otherwise?   

It is the relentless grind which takes you from nowhere to somewhere. A brutal trek up an incline so steep that at times you have traversed it on your hands and knees. A journey so long that at times, it seemed insurmountable and unconquerable. A summit occupied by a redhead beyond compare or challenge for three hundred and fifty seven days which kept you in the driving snow and biting chill. Do you remember how you felt when you finally knocked her down? The relief, then the ecstasy distilled into rocket fuel and injected directly into your veins.

Tell me, Miss Johnson – how did it feel the moment you rolled onto your back, stared up at the lights and felt the cool metal faceplate of the Bombshells’ World Championship slide between your trembling fingers?

The question is less, perhaps, your suitability to play this role. It is tailor-made for someone of such limited ability.  How many times have you challenged for glory only to fall short? How many times have you been an interesting chapter or three in a much bigger story you were never written to star in? Why are so many important events of Roxi Johnson’s career footnotes in the summaries of others? No, this is your story. The only unknown is the role I am supposed to play. Am I the final challenge to prove you have come as far as you can go? There is surely nothing left for you to do in SCW.

Your unlikely, unrepeatable win against my Diminished Hurricane brought you title glory and our meeting at sea shortly will give you the chance to break an undefeated streak that I have never before mentioned and yet, curiously, is often a topic of much interest and frantic conversation. Could I be the final test in your turnaround tale? Is my purpose merely to fall in spectacular fashion and allow you to prove to the world that you deserved that centre stage?

That perhaps, for once, you are not a poor photocopy of Amber Ryan trying to ape someone you are not fit to so much as look at without due deference.

The Quest:

What are you searching for, My Heroine? Is it something physical draped over your shoulder, the envy of an entire roster, hungry to take it from you and from the light you claim to embody? Perhaps something more metaphysical, even spiritual. Is it Keira? A longing for more – a greater purpose or a grander design. Whatever that is, your time in SCW marks a journey towards realising such a goal. All that is required is a landscape to traverse to reach your bounty. There can be no treasure, after all, without a trial. No landing on some new frontier without a boundless and terrible ocean to cross. I am your ocean, inhospitable and impassable. I will be your realm across which you trek for all your hopes and dreams. In this permutation of our archetype, Miss Johnson, you struggle not against the environment or its agents but me. Wholly, entirely.

Voyage and Return:

It is not the destination but the journey that takes you there and back again. I wonder what you will learn when the Sun Princess returns to port? What lessons will our time together have taught you? I have such choice miseries to inflict upon you in service to that inescapable heroic desire for self-sacrifice and martyrdom. They cannot help but suffer, because inevitably, all heroes confuse pain with penance and pleasure with sin. It is a perverse badge of honour they all wear – one you wear. So in this particular scenario, I exist only to act in the role of teacher given SCW have so graciously provided both the literal voyage and its resultant return. I wonder then, whether you will take to my teachings easily? Will you be a difficult pupil, like Amber was? She resisted so hard, and ultimately, I was forced to make my lessons so very painful.

When you return to the United States as the former Bombshells’ World Champion, how will you feel? What will you tell Keira? Will you tell her the truth that has been steadily gnawing up from the pit of your gut since you understood what would happen when you stood across from me in a week’s time?

The truth that you had always cared for the destination itself. Craved it. The success. The glory. The recognition. The sin of pride, worn on your shoulder and on your heart. Carnal and urgent.

Comedy:

There is no greater example of something inherently amusing than the fact this company now stands with a so-called superhero as its most powerful Bombshell. Not because of the absurdity of it all at so-called face value – why should the power of human flight be any less ridiculous than choosing to wear a mask as a pseudo-face – but because it suggests a fundamental weakness of spirit and strength. Heroes exist in opposition to darkness, corruption. Despair. They do not arrive before evil comes calling; they spawn in response to it. Ergo the presence of such a figure implies a pre-existing weakness. A cancer of failure. There can be no greater comedic offering than a figure whose mere existence undermines its entire reason to be.

Perhaps this is my favourite archetype.

Tragedy:

You were never supposed to be World Champion, My Heroine. There is not a member of this company, either administrative or professional; corporate or technical, who believes your victory over Amber Ryan was one of superior ability. It was merely one of entropy. You tried and failed on multiple occasions, each time being given the luxury of retreat into ignorance to reconsider, regenerate, renew and replan. She continued on, being diminished gradually by each success – worn out and worn-through. For almost a year, while you waited. Such distinctly unheroic behaviour if one considers it closely enough.

Waiting for inertia and thermodynamics to remove enough energy from a hurricane’s system to finally take from it everything that made her worthwhile. And then parade it as if it was earned justly and truthfully. You have defended that stolen heart against also-rands and nobodies. Pretenders and the patently unfit. A reign as fraudulent and lacking in greatness as the so-called Champion who now presides over it.

You were never supposed to be World Champion. You know that, and yet you have worked too hard and for too long to ever accept it. So you wear the symbol of office and struggle to breathe under its crushing weight. How tragic.

Rebirth:

At last, we come to the final archetype and the only one in which I can offer to help you. For so long, Miss Johnson, you have fought every pitched battle on this miserable company’s behalf. Stood up for those who either could not, or more likely would not, do so on their own. You have intervened where it would have been so much easier to simply walk away, resist the urge to get changed in a dirty phone booth and keep whistling that jaunty tune as you make your way home for the night. 

What if I told you there was respite? What if I gave you an opportunity to lay your weary head down for a while? It is not too late to accept that your place at the summit of this division is over, and accept such with grace. Relinquish the title to me, of your own free will, and I will teach you such wonderful things. Show you such wonderful things. Think of the possibilities, of how you could be elevated to even greater heights.

My Heroine, the sights we would see and the deeds we could accomplish together. The good you could do, if you would only take my thorn-painted hand and run free.

… All you have to do is welcome me with your arms and heart wide open and I will show you such a beautiful way. All the barriers that have been erected because you were not Amber Ryan will be dismantled. Destroyed. The respect that has been withheld from you because you are not like she was, all of that will be earned thrice-fold back. Together, you will receive the adulation and praise that all heroes innately crave.

After all, you do not save others because it is the right thing to do. You save them because you like the way it makes you feel. Enjoy the power imbalance; crave the superiority complex that comes with elevating yourself above others.

You already have a god complex, Miss Johnson. Embrace my grand design and I will make you a god.

Welcome to the Rapture.


[The Past –  Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA, Autumn 2017]

A casual nod is all it takes to bypass the front desk, the officer sat behind it more interested in getting back to his Fantasy Football League than wasting valuable time maintaining eye contact for more than a half-second. Drawing in a deep lungful of air, I hold it in my chest and push through the heavy double-set doors which separate the thread-worn carpet under my feet from the shining linoleum beyond.

The walls are painted harsh white, tiled about halfway up so that strange shadows are cast against them by the unforgiving fluorescent tubes buzzing loudly overhead. Tables, cabinets and desks made from stainless steel circle the walls, all clustered around a single gurney sat in the centre of the room. Four gutters carved into the floor like the points of a compass meet at a drain underneath the gurney. Opposite, a row of three thick hatches are set into the brickwork. A thin line of frost draws around their edges.

Finally running out of air in my lungs, I can’t help but breathe. The smell hits me like the kind of hard shot that got rained down on my glass jaw last week. It’s an overwhelming stink of antiseptic; a painfully clean tang that burns the nostril and waters the eye. For a few seconds I just concentrate on getting over the reek.

Once my senses recover themselves enough to do their jobs again, something altogether worse floats on by. It’s almost buried by the antiseptic, but it’s there. Something cold, damp. It smells like the end of the line. Decay.
The clatter of the door behind me interrupts my dark musings, and turning on my heels I spy a pair of hard, calculating eyes boring into mine. Her features hidden by a blue surgical mask and skull cap, I don’t need to see her mouth to know its upturned into one hell of a frown. The cutting timbre of her voice is all that’s needed.

“What the hell are you doing in here?” She all but barks.

That’s a mighty tough place to start a conversation. Reaching up, I pull the hat from my head and do my absolute best to appear at least a little contrite. “Your man through the doors waved me through.”
 
She crosses her arms over her chest. “That doesn’t answer my question. Do I need to bring him through here too?”

“Name’s Terryl,” I offer, holding my hands in the air in mock surrender. “Just here to get a little more information on Cherry Blossom.”

The distrust in her eyes subtly shifts to surprise. The silence stretches into seconds.

“That’s not his name,” She says finally. “How did you know him?”

Sighing, I chew on the inside of my cheek. “Cherry got ignored an awful lot. That meant people talked even when he was standing right behind. He would find out things, things he could pass on to me in exchange for …”

 “Drugs? You’ve got some nerve— “

 “Never that stuff,” I interrupt, anger lacing my words. “Just cash.”

She scoffs. “Money he used to buy drugs?”

I shrug my shoulders. “We’re all folk, with our own vices and virtues. Cherry sank deeper than I could reach without diving in after him.”

Turning away, the Doctor wanders over to one of the freezers set into the far wall. “Why’re you here?”
“I need to know how he bought it.”

“You’re not Next of Kin, or a significant other,” She clips. “Why should I tell you anything?”

Setting my hat back on my head, I fix the Doctor with all the truthfulness I can muster. “I need to know if Cherry died doing what was going to kill him for sure some day, or because someone else expedited his downward spiral. Could be real helpful in forestalling me taking up your time and your freezer in the near-future.”

For a few moments, it looks like she’s mustering up the will for an argument. Eventually, she relents and makes her way over to a nearby table. Rifling through the documentation, she pulls free a half-dozen sheets of paper and flicks them out of sight.

“Overdose” She says simply. Accurately. I nod in appreciation.

Turning on my heels, I’ve just about made it to the doors when a question rings out from somewhere behind.

“Why did you call him Cherry Blossom?”
 
Dropping my head, I don’t bother to turn back around. “About the only thing he loved other than getting high was this weird brand of Hershey chocolate I think he got hold of from someplace up in Canada. Pockets used to be stuffed full of rolled up foil wrappers. Stuff tasted awful; sickly sweet and bitter all at the same time. Had a picture of a tree on it all resplendent with bright red flowers.”

“That’s it?” She asks, incredulously.

Pushing the door open, I head straight through. He never had anything else to his name.



~*~*~*~*~*~


The Reverend’s voice drops low, full of reverence as he spreads his arms wide and raises them above his head. His tone is hushed, as if he isn’t standing in front of a dozen chairs arranged in two neat blocks to either side. As far as this Man of God is concerned, there’s no one else for miles – he’s deep inside some intimate conversation with the Almighty we all just happen to be eavesdropping into.

Looking left and right at the empty chairs spread all around, I can’t help but correct myself. Some intimate conversation with the Almighty that I’m eavesdropping into.

Despite the urgings of the Man of God standing ahead, exalting us – me, specifically – to remember the departed in all manner of positive ways, my attention wanders to the coffin laid up between the rows of chairs. The wood is some unvarnished pine, cheap and plentiful like the poor old soul interned inside. The corners are scratched and the bottom gouged where it’s been roughly handled by someone being paid by the hour, or not at all. The only splash of colour is a pile of paper blossoms coloured cherry-red on top.

My eyes pass over the coffin, and there’s a discord I just can’t reconcile between the words of the Reverend, praising the departed and the memories I have of just what the deceased got up to before he ended up taking this dirt nap.

Cherry Blossom was by no stretch of the imagination a “Good Guy”. Whenever faced with adversity or the slightest hint of the prospect of a struggle, he’d take the easy way out even if that meant doing something infinitely harder in the long term. If a Man’s word is his bond, Cherry’s promises struggled to outlast the chain links made from paper that decorate Children’s Parties the world over. In any kind of dealing, he was less a person and more an animal in that the latter could be bartered with to do the simplest of tasks in return for food, or a pet, or a walk. Or cash to procure one more hit of something dirty and brown, squirted through some sharp point that had broken someone else’s skin before making it to his.

He had his uses – he performed a function. The information he gave me almost certainly saved at least one life, and improved a half-dozen others but all of this came at the cost of his. Cherry was trapped in a merciless, brutal loop whereby every action and thought, every fibre of his being was consumed by the need to forget everything he’d been and become.

I could have helped him, I think. I mean I tried … But was my heart really in it? At some fundamental level, a person at least needs to want to help themselves, even if they don’t have the tools, the expertise or the willpower to do it alone. Cherry didn’t ever come close to having one of those three and yet, looking back, all my efforts to lend him these prerequisites seem hollow and slight. The truth of course is there, just lurking beneath the surface of polite conversation and everyday thought that keeps me from pondering the kind of things I’d rather forget or pretend never happened.

The truth … That he was more use to me as something less than Human, a ruined shell kept alive by the pharmaceuticals he shot through his veins, than some functional person with likes, dislikes and an ability to resist the urge to fleece women on the street for just enough coin to score one more stab in the flesh.
I needed him broken far more than I needed him whole.

The information Cherry gave me through his short and unpleasant life ended up helping so many more people, in so many more ways than he could ever have done short of becoming some legendary civic leader with his own statue in a town’s square. At some point, I carried out a cost-benefit analysis that was never my right to conduct and decided his life – such as it had been – was forfeit in the name of something greater. Something I decided was greater.

A hand on my shoulder rouses me from my thoughts, and looking up I lock eyes with the Reverend standing aside.

“Thank you for coming,” He nods. His voice is solemn and peaceful in a way so few ever are.

Words roar around my mind, but nothing makes it as far as my lips. Instead, I just nod.

“He was a wretched man.”

Eyes widening, I jerk my chin upwards. “Excuse me?”

Setting himself down on the chair next to mine, the Reverend sighs. “Though I am a Man of God, and through me his will is made manifest, I am just a Man. Through my eyes, I see what all Men can see and what I have known of Cherry is only sadness, pain and suffering; much of which he has inflicted on others.”

Slowly, I nod. “You knew him well then?”

“Well enough,” He concedes. “His means were such that he simply couldn’t be in the sinful bosom of his addiction nearly as often as he so desperately craved. Thus, he needed somewhere to be when he was not slumped against a back alley wall, or accosting strangers, or stealing …”

“My Church is a refuge for all,” He continues. “Even those who have been forsaken by all others.”
Those last few words sting hard.

Setting his hand on my shoulder, the Reverend stands with a wince of discomfort as his old bones shift. “We are all defined by the conscious choices that we make, and of those choices we justify all of them twice-fold. Once to ourselves, and once to the Lord.”

Snatching my hat from the floor, I let out a long keening sigh. I’m not sure I’ve even managed to justify those choices to myself, let alone some Higher Power.



18
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XIII – Heartaches & Hurricanes

__________________________________________________________________________________

[The Present – Las Vegas, Nevada, USA, Summer 2022]

It comes in a single rolling wave of agony that cuts the urge from my lungs to draw in air. They freeze in mid-expansion, diaphragm trembling with the effort. Something deafeningly loud thunders between my ears, a bassy thump which loses all urgency as it slows to all but a crawl. There is the reaction to cry out but my jaw is locked shut, and there is nothing to power my vocal chords even if my lips could move to make the words. Numbness spreads out from the centre of my chest, making ice then making nothingness as feeling floats away. All the while, my mind continues to work and worry, because there is a little oxygen left to burn up in the blood with panic.

Suddenly, something violently twists behind the prison of my ribcage. Torsioned, my heart gives a single all-encompassing pulse before exploding back into agonising life. The diaphragm releases, my lungs collapse and then something primal and animalistic overrides every other consideration and commands them to fill. Molecular oxygen is torn free from their linings as soon as it is absorbed and consumed as quickly as it finds the blood. Rationality reboots, and some semblance of calm returns.

The numbness stays for a while – it always does. Gradually, nerves find each other again and neuropeptides recall their mechanisms of work. My toes and fingers tingle, and then they tremble and then they respond to my commands. Seconds become minutes, but time is relative when your entire existence is temporarily taken offline.

He looks at me for a moment from across the front seat but says nothing. I feel a warm hand lay across mine gently. It comforts me. Even now, he is conflicted and a myriad of feelings play across his tight jaw for just a few moments before iron will clamps down and removes them from view.

“Abigayle …” He begins, but never finishes. The words trail off into silence and die there, lost in the search for something of meaning that has not been said – been wasted – before. He will try again before we go home. Instead, he climbs out from the driver’s side and makes his way around to help me to stand. It takes a moment to find the strength in my legs but a strong arm around my waist gives me long enough to try.

The gnarled bark of palm trees baked a washed-out ochre rise up on either side of a concrete path which cuts through the dry flowerbeds; a pointed arrow towards the large glass frontage of University Medical Center. Cool blue lights diffuse through shiny panes – all intended to induce relaxation in an environment more used to facilitating fear, unease, suffering and worse.

There is something discordant about a hospital in the summer sunshine. A cold and sterile place, with cool tiles on the floor that make the bare skin of your feet ache with numbness. The powerful, bright white light shining overhead as you perch on the edge of the examination bed, paper gown crumpled up underneath cracked leather padding. The Doctor’s lips curl wide but the smile never reaches his eyes. And then they begin to talk but it sounds as if you are both underwater and you cannot hear the words …

What little breeze survived the rise of the Sun whips the fabric of my summer dress before dying out, providing just enough force to stir me from my reverie.The material begins to cling where the sweat underneath provides adhesive, making tight bands that bunch around my thighs and biceps and stomach. The gauzed veil across my features, hanging underneath the fastener strapped to my coiled hair casts all the world in an off-hue haze. Not a single person, either patient or staff, gives me a second glance despite my hidden face.

People stare all too often in the Sinful City, but this is a hospital, after all. Who knows what horrific wound I am hiding underneath.

Even more so … This is a hospital in Las Vegas, after all. Who would even care?

My Songbird walks slightly ahead, his long legs and deep thoughts beginning to carry him ever further forward. Occasionally he glances back, slows, but he never looks at me for more than a moment. What little stilted conversation died along with the engine of his car a few minutes previously, as the towering concrete and steel block of the main hospital building came into view. I am unsure if the surroundings unsettle him, or whether this is purely to be expected as he continues to wrestle with things that have come to pass through his action …

… Or inaction.

The receptionist is refreshingly terse and disinterested, once we exchange dry heat for industrially-cooled and conditioned air; hardly exchanging a word in favour of a clipboard and a forefinger pointed to a row of scarlet-red chairs arranged in a wide semicircle nearby.

Silence only survives another few minutes before becoming another statistic in a building full of morbid metrics.

“Going to tell me why we’re here?”

Over the past few weeks I have become much adjusted to his presence, to the point I often miss it when he is not around. It is not love – because I think I know what that is and this is not it. Nonetheless … If I had the choice, I would choose to spend time with him. Even if he would much rather be anywhere else. What might have once began as expediency has quickly evolved into something that might be friendship, if the circumstances weren’t so outlandish as to be laughable.

Still, there is no-one laughing here. Hospitals are where humour and their owners come to die, after all.

Signing my name at the bottom of the last sheet, I look up at a couple emerging from a nearby consultation room. She is sobbing, struggling to keep the tears from running over the hand clamped against her mouth. He does not know what to say, so he says nothing. Behind, the Doctor exchanges a glance with the same brusque receptionist and taps the glass of his wristwatch. She nods.   

“I am here for my test results. You are here because I need you.”

An eyebrow climbs up his forehead, and SCW’s World Heavyweight Champion looks genuinely shocked for a few moments. “Need me?”

I nod, still not looking in his direction. “That is what I said.”

The Doctor so urgently concerned with timekeeping bustles over, gaze not towards me but the large crystal-plated clock inset into the marble frieze behind. It depicts some minimalist interpretation of Asclepius, flanked by stylized versions of the winged Caduceus and its entwined snakes. For a few seconds my attention wanders …

“Miss DeLune?”

Standing, I nod again and offer him the clipboard which he accepts without reading. Instead, he simply gestures with a hand towards the consultation room – its door still swung wide open after the last dose of bad news delivered just before lunchtime.

The smell of industrial air freshener is only slightly preferable to the otherwise ever-present stink of antiseptic that permeates every other part of the building. Factory-grade flowers, strong enough to make the eyes water. Taking a seat with Knox, the Doctor sets himself down at the desk in front of us and idly rifles through the pages of a folder. And then another. He frowns, pulls the drawer open and repeats the exercise again until he finally finds what I presume is mine.

“Miss DeLune …” He repeats, stalling for time as he flicks through.

Behind my veil, I indulge in a sigh. My Songbird turns suddenly, surprised, and smirks a little. “Congestive cardiac failure.”

His smile fades away. The Doctor nods. “Yes … We’ve … Yes.” He taps the page on the desk as if to reassure himself. “Your latest test results show an accelerated degradation – way quicker than we’d otherwise have predicted. Your transplant is wearing out fast. Have you been keeping to the restricted lifestyle? Minimising exertions, that sort of thing?”

My smile grows, but neither of them can see it behind the veil. “Of course.”

My Songbird narrows his eyes, lips parting momentarily before changing course and closing shut. Instead, he leans back slightly in his chair. Fingers steepled together. The Doctor glances up and offers me the slightest interrogation – a lukewarm effort to divine my truthfulness but he has no idea who he is dealing with, and is easily reassured.

“In that case,” He continues, blithely, “And on the basis of these results … I’m afraid I’ll have to recommend a return to the waiting list for a replacement.”

“No.”

“What?” Both him and Knox say in unison.

Although they share the same answer, it is given for different reasons. The Physician opposite is simply surprised to be offered something other than a desperation for a solution, a cure – anything that will prolong life otherwise threatened with an early end. More practised at explaining why there is nothing anyone can do than justifying why they should try, he is easily caught off guard by the simple notion that I might simply decline.

Knox’s reaction is more heartfelt. Ironic, given the circumstances. He is conflicted over me, of course. How else could he feel given the wonderfully grotesque things we have done together? … And yet, he cannot quite bring himself to cast me completely aside. Perhaps he simply wants to see the tragic ending I promise him, or maybe he is grimly fascinated by all of this – by me – and cannot quite give up such an intoxicating mystery.

Neither of them understand my motivations, although my Songbird understands the urgency of it all. He feels the building pressure as events come to a head that cannot now be stopped. We are so close now, all of us in this tangled web interconnected in myriad ways, and the tendrils flex and twist with every subtle vibration. My work is almost complete, but it has come at cost.

I am so very tired.

The fatigue has begun to sap me, drain everything from everywhere. With every passing week the medications lose their efficacy a little more, every exertion becoming that incrementally greater effort. It is building beyond the ignorable now. I find it difficult to sleep and when I do, powerful dreams wrestle rest from my weary mind.

That is to be expected, however, given the stakes. My work is almost complete … Just a little further to go.

“How many more pieces of me need to be cut out …” I begin, conscious the two men are still waiting for a response. “I have had three successful replacement hearts and one failure. Do you know what it feels like to have your ribcage broken four times?”

My flesh-and-blood hand reaches up, pulling down the neckline of my dress to reveal the thick rope of knotted scar tissue disappearing down towards my navel. “Not every flaw exists to be fixed. There is beauty in such ugliness.”

The Doctor frowns, smacking his lips together as his gaze switches over towards Knox who simply shrugs, and sits back. “Miss DeLune, I’d recommend–”

“I am not interested in your recommendation,” I interrupt, the plastic fingers of my prosthetic twitching as I reach into the small handbag sat between my feet and pull free a folded sheet. “These are the list of medications I will require to manage my decline.”
The frown deepens, but he takes the paper, unfurls it, and scans the dozen or so medications.

“You’ve got some medical training …” He nods.

“Likely more than you,” I reply with no small hint of sarcasm.

Suddenly reaching some internalised trigger point whereupon he considers himself to have met the ethical obligation to try, he nods. It is a jarring switch but one I recognise. A good physician does not see people, not really. They see problems to be assessed, fixed if possible. Given the bare minimum comfort if not before attention moves to the next problem. And the next. And the next. The Doctor reaches into the still-open drawer and pulls out a prescription pad. “I’ll need you to put your decision to forego treatment down in writing.”

My head dips. “I already have – it is on the other side.”

Twenty minutes later, clutching a large and flimsy box of brown plastic bottles, my Songbird decides he has had enough. We are still under the heat of the lunchtime sun and just within the shadow of the palm tree furthest from the glass frontage when he stops. “What the fuck was that?”

“I told you this would end in tragedy for both of us.”

He blinks. “Yeah, but you didn’t say–”

“DId you think you were the only one who would suffer?” I interrupt, turning on my heels. “I did not give you a prediction on tragedy, I made you a promise. This is my end of the bargain. Consider it your proof; insurance that you will be free of the things I know that you still fear others will come to.”

He does not like my reply, but his acquiescence or agreement are not required. Only compliance. “So you just let yourself die?”

I smile, but he cannot see it. No-one can. “My Songbird – I have already died three times before. This will simply be the closing act on a four-part design.”

Turning on his heels, Knox takes one step forward towards the car park and then halts. His head turns back but his eyes never meet mine. “You said you’d had four …”

“You do not want to ask me where they came from.”

And he does not, but it is quite the story to tell.

 _________________________________________________________________________________

[The Rapture]

Katarina – I am reminded of some words you spoke only a short while ago. A diatribe fuelled by all the sorrow and hurt you felt at what had befallen your so-called “sister”; a threat sent my way with all the force your bitterness could muster for transmission. A promise you hastily made to all of creation to teach me what, to date, no-one has yet managed. A gift from you, passed to me …

A dose of pain and violence?

Is that what you think you have in store for me?

You have no concept of the meaning of those words and they come tumbling, loose and free, from the meat inside your head that struggles to make sense of what it sees. A new world it was not invited to make new along with. Instead, some natural order that has stood the test of so much time begins to creak; black iron sags and screeches as the whole edifice of what you have watched built – what you have helped to build – threatens to crash down in splinters of broken metal and thick palls of poisoned, choking dust. You would do better to breathe it in deep, let your lips turn blue and the cyanide turn haemoglobin dark. Go to sleep and never wake up.

You would do better to lie down now in the Rapture I have brought about than stand back up and meet me pseudo face-to-face. Show a little of the modicum of emotional intelligence that has otherwise seen your stand at a distance and watch while others tried to stop me, suffered, and failed.

A dose of pain and violence?

You have no idea what that even means. What it feels like. You do not know how to articulate the concept in some doctrinal definition, let alone supply something empirical alongside. Do you know what it feels like to have your ribcage flex along a thrice-broken, thrice-healed fracture line for making the mistake of trying to reach for something above your head? Do you know what it is like to lose a limb and still feel an impossible heat when the missing forearm passes over a burning hob?

Your puerile visions of doom for me cannot possibly come close to matching the agonising reality that has already been my past. Your portents cannot scare me any more completely than the agonies I have already suffered through.

Have you ever cried for your mother, alone and desperate? I have.

I have peeled back the veneer that makes this company so bright it hurts to look at directly; stripped away the coloured layers which seem to pull in the wandering eyes of so many people all clambering to make something from nothing; become somebody from nobody. With the sharp facsimile of a fingernail made from hardened thermoplastic, I have scraped away the thin protective layer that stops oxidation and resists tarnish and I have seen what you all keep underneath it.

Rot. Decay. Filth. You disgust me.

There is a sickness inside me, and it is filling my soul up until it drowns in bile and poison. I watch this rotten edifice soldier on, shored up by the endless supply of relatively supple bodies ready to trade agonies for dollars and the opportunity for something approaching recognition. Their names bleed into each other: Adrienne, Jessica, Crystal, Chloe … They are representations of the status-quo. That somehow, within the state borders of Nevada, entropy is paused and the system somehow continues on in some strange homeostasis. Nothing new enters, nothing becomes lesser. As if the laws of thermodynamics themselves are willing to allow this place and everything in it to simply exist undisturbed. Unmolested.

It disgusts me.

For my part, I tried to change it. Remake it into something new and shining. The Rapture sought to rebuild in glorious renewal what had become stale, and jaded and worn. And yet months on, what is there to show for my efforts? For all those I have carefully gifted my vision unto with choice suffering and beautifully-worked miseries, how many more remain ignorant? Wallowing in that status-quo, unaware of the fate that will soon be unavoidably, irresistibly theirs.

I am tired, Katarina. Does it show? My hand shakes sometimes, when it rests on the tabletop. My greatest work is gone, My formerly Resplendent Hurricane, smashed apart by that same hand because of the poison you cut into her veins and pushed inside. My grand design unpicked by the blind who did not even destroy it out of jealousy or fear, but idiocy. You could not even oppose it on merit, or ideology. You stumbled into its innards and destroyed it through incompetence and ignorance.

You have taken something very important from me, so I will repay this in kind. I am not finished with Amber Ryan. Does that make your heart hurt to hear?

It is not enough to incapacitate. It is not even enough to cripple, because such a thing is one-way. Something that happens to you – not brought on by your own actions or decisions. It is not enough to hurt Amber physically, or even make her spend a while considering what is really, truly important. Such a plan is doomed to failure because even though she may be thinking about anything other than this company and its phantom zone-esque existence, the hole in her chest only aches for one thing, and that can only be found in Nevada. In SCW. Currently, in the all too flesh-and-blood hands of a certain Superhero …

I am looking forward to meeting Miss Johnson, very soon. She is so important to me.

It is not enough to hurt her in body, or cause a crisis of faith. Instead, I want her to come back when every single logical point, coherent argument and sane piece of advice points – screams – to walk away. I want … I need Miss Ryan to heal, to walk tall and strong and still learn nothing from the lessons I have taught her and darken my company-provided doorway again.

I think I know how to do it, Miss Jones. I think I know what will bring her back to me even after all of this. But first, I must deal with you. Again.

It is interesting to see how quickly you have held up the record book as evidence that you are prepared for what is going to happen to you this Sunday. In all my time in SCW, I have never referenced such meaningless accomplishments as victories. What do they really matter, except to underline what I already know – that this company and its so-called talent lack the faith in their convictions to endure. There has never been any doubt in me, and so I do not need an echo chamber made of factoids and statistics.

And yet you cling to your victory over me as desperately as a life preserver adrift on a cold and lonely sea. Does it bring you comfort? Are you made more safe, more secure in the knowledge I can be beaten within a rules-based order? It is so curious to me that so many spend so much time espousing all the ways I will meet my comeuppance, be struck down. Destroyed. And yet here I still walk, and all that can be levered against me is a single match in which I was not even personally put down to stare up at those bright lights.

You have made this so very personal, Katarina … So why use such a technicality as a shield?

You do not strike me as a woman who pursues accolades, or accomplishments. Perhaps in that singular aspect, we are more alike than you could ever stomach to admit. The Internet Championship I hold is less proof of some metric of excellence, and more a gateway against which they will come and they will be hurt so very badly all in the service of desperate, hungering recognition. Could it be that your Roulette Championship serves the very same purpose?

Somehow, I do not think you would say even if it were true. Do you remember when we exchanged words sat on top of transit cases, only a few short months ago backstage? I remember how much you wanted to say and how little made it through impulse control. I wonder why you have suddenly found such strength of will to speak to clearly, so passionately now. Is it purely because of your perceived connection with Miss Ryan? Or is there something deeper motivating you, pushing you …

You have made this so very personal and yet, you think you have a level of involvement and depth all out of proportion to your actual worth. You believe Amber was tricked and beaten down? You had such a rare opportunity, Katarina – a chance to see the objective truth without the refraction caused by bias and interpretation and all the foibles which make us question what the lens so accurately captures from the light. You could still have saved yourself, perhaps, if you had taken advantage of that final proffered prosthetic hand. I could have pulled you from the freezing waters, sodden and shaking in foamy brine but still alive, if only you had not decided to stay in the rolling waves with the rest of the damned.

If only you had not confused the illusion of safety, of being right and just, with the reality. So you drown with everyone else who thinks they understand, instead of huddling in the warmth of the truth which I so generously offered to share despite your willful, repeated discourtesies. 

I did not trick Miss Ryan. I did not turn her from any path she was not otherwise walking – even if her eyes were closed while she stepped. You all drink from the same delusion, cupping your shaking hands and letting that sweet lie spill free in your greed to slurp and gulp deep such complete and total self-delusion. Only my Songbird has so far broken free from that spell but you? Just like all the others. Their names are a litany of sacrifices made for no reason or value at all; a gas-stop martyr bleeding on the oil-stained forecourt, dying in defence of ten dollars and change because they chose to take a stand with no reason to stand behind it.

Just like you will do this Sunday, in Scottsdale. You will sacrifice yourself for no reason – no good one – because the cause you think is worth dying for never existed at all. Why surrender your last breath for something that has no dignity? Why are you rushing headlong into annihilation with the flimsiest of pretences?

Why are you so eager to fall? Is this self-flagellation and penance for failing to protect your so-called sister? Are you punishing yourself for some perceived inaction? There is no need to create a new justification for your shame and guilt, when there are so many other good ones still intact and available. You were never supposed to intervene, Katarina; that was not your role to play.

Instead, you were only required to react. Be aghast. That you have chosen to do something more is inconvenient, but not surprising. For a long time, you have followed her in a desperate and transparent attempt to fuel your own reputation and importance by syphoning off just a little of her magnificent radiance. A theft, but a clever one that obviously paid dividends, considering your status as Roulette Champion. You project a kind of purity of spirit and intent all out of odds with your more debased and cunning strategies. I am quite impressed.

My Diminished Hurricane was such a sight. Did you see her? Weaving and spinning and swirling; such beautiful chaos painted red. A monster made from random chance, cruel irony and deliberate, brutal mistakes. Something that pretended to be a force of nature, unsteerable, uncontrollable, but that was never true. Something claiming to be rudderless. Something wicked that way came, and it was terrible to behold. For three hundred and fifty seven days they dashed themselves against her, snapping bones in shrieking winds just for the opportunity to experience that agony firsthand. Oh, to be put down by her own hand. So many sacrificed so much for the chance. Of course we both know there was never really any chance at all.

So tell me, Katarina … Who has ever made Amber Ryan do something she did not want to do? Amongst all the mock-outrage and hollowed-out fury, where is the self-reflection or the much-vaunted “closeness” that those who supposedly knew her well – like sisters – should have applied before opening their mouths and disengaging rational thought or impulse control?

Who has ever made Amber Ryan do something she did not want to do?

Consider the question carefully, because I will extract the answer from you at Climax Control. In what coherent way can one of the most dominant competitors this company has ever seen, a woman who has forged a reputation made from stuff stronger and darker than wrongs or night, be reduced to some befuddled simpleton, accepting external input like a radio-controlled marionette?

I wonder who has done the greater damage to Amber long-term. Me, or the small but potent army of sycophants and self-appointed carers, such as you, who have taken it upon themselves to rewrite history as they fall over each other to offer ever more plastic platitudes. You spend so much time caring for the version of her you think you see, that you do not even grasp how it was that I was able to make her mine – if even for a little while.

If nothing else, perhaps you will appreciate that I have left Miss Ryan in a state that most closely parallels the image you hold of her in your heart, necessitating your mewlings and your worry: powerless, broken. Enfeebled. Asking who had done the greater damage was an exercise in the hypothetical – it was me.

It is me.  Perhaps she will finally come to appreciate your love and support when you offer to change her catheter as she recovers at home. Remember to pinch the drainage port to prevent backflow.

Would you like to know how I did it? How I redirected her wrath, usurped her control? Made her mine?

I told her the truth. Such beautiful simplicity. No Machiaviallian subterfuge, threads so tangled the mass blots out the sky. Nothing so conniving, or subtle. I did not have to find a new cause to split her soul, or conspire to turn a sore spot gangrenous until she tried to cut it out herself. No. All I had to do, Katarina, is point out the obvious. Highlight the aching wound in her chest that made every step a gut-rattling struggle and ask: why not sew it closed? I am not surprised, however, that this truth of a truth is unknown to you. Why would you acknowledge something you helped create?

It should be obvious, but I do not think you are clever enough to feel it, let alone see it and acknowledge lucidly, consciously. The blade used to cut deep into Amber’s heart and lever it out from her aching ribs was never in my prosthetic hand – it was in yours. In Mister Bane’s. In every single person who cared for some idyllic version of Miss Ryan who had never existed outside the twisted collective fantasy of a dozen mind’s eyes, working in fever-pitch unity. How could you not see this particular truth? It was less hidden in the long grass and more towering in front of your slack-jawed face, as you mouthlessly worked to understand why everything you have ever known is coming to an end.

You cut her with your love, poisoned her with your compassion. You told her she was a good person.

I told my Songbird a lie once, Katarina. I told him there was no such thing as monsters, only monstrous people, but that is not the case. Amber Ryan is a monster, and I think you have seen its lumpen, misshapen glare burn out from underneath a tangled fringe of red. She is a creature made from spite and rage which rails against the crime of being made to take part in a world she did not ask to be brought into. For decades she has taken unjustifiable revenge against those whose only sin was to take a little happiness in the agony of existence, before the former was snuffed out by the latter. 

And then you cut her with your love.

Told her she was a good person. Humanised her; taught her how to have compassion without explaining the consequences of equipping a monster designed only to destroy with the capacity to regret. Tell me, what did you think would happen? If I had not done what I did, she would have destroyed you all as surely as she would ultimately have destroyed herself.

Instead, I receive your scorn. Hate. Because I corrected a terrible mistake you made.

Such monsters are finely-tuned engines of destruction. A thousand whirling blades in carefully-orchestrated, synchronised violence. They are intricately balanced things, crafted to hurt to the exclusion of all else. And yet you and all the others with their fawning feelings and misplaced emotions loaded such a remarkable machine with second-guesses and doubt. Unbalanced the blades, made them sweep against each other; inwards instead of out. So they cut inside, cut her instead. And she bled so heavily until each step became a stumble.

Then, Katarina, what did you do, after you cut her with your love?

You poisoned her with compassion. Told something terrible and malevolent that it would be okay, if she only stopped to feel instead of fighting on. It is a testament to Amber’s strength of will that she resisted the corrosive effect of your caring for as long as she did, endured the toxicity of kindness that hollowed out her bones and made the blood in her veins thick like molasses. Nothing is invincible, of course and eventually she fell. Not by my plastic hand of course, no. Many weeks before.

You are the reason Miss Johnson became Bombshells’ World Champion. You are the reason, Katarina, that my Diminished Hurricane lost her heart to a Superhero. You were the cause that manifested an effect which led me to take the only course of action open. To intervene, to bring down a monster about to rage against the unsolvable equation – a paradox – of knowing how to love, to be kind, to be human without the mechanism to do such.

You wormed your way into her with your kindness, a cancer that twisted her up and malformed all the strength and power and grace and made it into something foul. Made the flesh red and puffy, engorged with virulence and rot.

And when finally, because even the most mighty must fall, she stumbled and fell to her knees and lost that heart …

I knew that the damage could not be repaired. There would simply be nothing left if that twisted, engorged tumour of feeling you had spent so long spreading through my Hurricane were cut out. Nothing left to heal. So perhaps in the ultimate irony to be expressed here, now, I offered my own kindness. Of a sort.

I put her down myself. Sacrificed everything she could have been to correct the errors of what she had ultimately become because of your interference. Your compassion. Your love.

A dose of pain and violence?

Perhaps you have already visited this on me, months before I would get the opportunity to respond in physical, in kind. You have interfered to destroy something that would have remade all of this; torn down this miserable company so bloated with average, so engorged on normalcy. The beautiful thing that could have stood in its place afterwards would have been such a sight to behold. Instead, we are left in ruin. Walking bleary-eyed through a shattered landscape of torn-up potential and burning hopes. Follow their ink-black pyres up into the pale sky and watch them occlude the Sun.

Recognise the wrong you have made against me darker than death or night. Something not even family might forgive.

Family. Sisters.

Do you really believe that?

Here is a woman who has cut the sky and made it bleed, fought impossible odds, won and then defeated them in rematches. A record-breaking monster who commands whirlwinds and hurricanes effortlessly – the mere mention of which begins social media wars and creative excuses as to why defeat follows defeat whenever she is opposed. For what reason would she stop and look down at the likes of you?

Katarina, you have spent too much time in the company of the soft-headed. Mewling children like Miss Benton, who lack the intellectual rigour or the simple good sense to protect themselves from long walks versus short cliff faces. You cannot be something special, or worthwhile, because you wish it so. There is no way to be remarkable when made of unremarkable stuff.

You are an exercise in leaping up as high as you can to see over the fence, catching glimpses of something exciting through sun-bleached planks. At the top of your jump is a solitary moment of relevancy, but do not confuse making eye contact with someone inside as validation. It is not an invitation to join them; only politeness at best, or maybe, curiosity.

Amber never cared for you. She has never cared for anyone, herself included. Why would anyone do the things she has done otherwise? She did not ask you to save her.

She did not ask anyone to save her.

This Sunday, there will be no salvation. No second chances. No opportunities. The Rapture is no longer concerned with rebuilding; making anew. Instead, it will uplift only those who are found worthy and promising, and deserving of something greater.

I have already judged this company, its competitors – you – and found nothing worth saving. Welcome to the end of everything you have ever known, Katarina. If you remember nothing else, remember this:

You cut her with your love. Now it is time to cauterise the wound.


 

19
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XII – Enraptured

__________________________________________________________________________________

[The Present – Saint Louis, Missouri, USA, Summer 2022]

The stink of iron spilling from her slack lips mingles with sweat and something spiced; a sweet perfume that climbs an unbearably hot column of lazy air to make my head swim, even as she topples backwards. Red hair runs red still, and glassy eyes squeeze open and shut in some hopeless, autonomic, reflexive loop. I do not think she can see me now, only dollops of colour in swirls that bleed around her brain. It is beautiful to see her so enfeebled, so weakened. So defeated.

Many have spoken about doing such a vaunted thing, but none have achieved it. Her legend has crossed beyond internet subculture and catering table talk between respected industry veterans, to become something revered. Even by those who intrinsically hate her.

I did not hate her. Quite the opposite. I think – I am almost certain – that I loved her at some point. It is difficult to quantify, since I am not entirely sure what constitutes the feeling. Still, there are some objective markers. A quickening of the heart, the tremble of limbs made from flesh and blood and not plastic. All recognisable.

All transitory. Fleeting. It was less a love and more an infatuation. Something to be enjoyed, perhaps even coveted but impermanent. Destined to be made obsolete and retired. Oh, how she was retired. The sound of her skull crashing against stonework rings through any number of hazy recollections to make each detail shake at some singular resonant frequency. A natural order of things which produces utter clarity.

Here is a whitewashed Painted Hurricane, bone-breaking winds dissipated and laid low and switched out for warm summer sun on my skin. Dropping to one knee I listen to the wet gurgle of her ruined throat, a diminuendo of increasingly hoarse, guttural gasps that trail off as what little oxygen makes it into her lungs is lost in a panting, heaving wheeze. The sensations feel welcome because I have longed for them for so long, but overwhelming because I dared not dream that I would finally be so privileged to watch her fall.

It is difficult to kill an idea. Especially one so powerful as a Queenpin. It takes root in all those who gaze upon her works and baulk and think: how? How can I defeat it?

You cannot defeat an idea. Instead, it must be destroyed. Scoured from existence, beyond reality and into the memories of those who no longer even look at it. Reach inside what they remember about her and pervert it. Change it. Take a missing conscience and give it back, but primed to poison instead of purify. A Flower Girl Named After the Stars again.

After much planning and hardship, so many sacrifices, I watched her fall.

Fall by my own thorn-painted hand. The cultivation of so many years of toil; of a test set half a decade ago and only now administered and so satisfactorily failed.

The harsh white of my prosthetic, curled in black ribbons of painted points, is flecked in wet splotches of blood that spill over its edges and drip to the rutted concrete in fat splashes. It is at this point I would lean in and hear her sob, but of course, she does not.

She did not. Amber Ryan has never shown such weakness even in her darkest moment – and there were such black minutes gifted from me to her. This one, now, for example. And so my suspension of disbelief twists and stretches and everything dissolves back into what is real and true and several days removed from my dream, turned a warm summer reality.

In this real world she is on a gurney, still breathing in stuttered, wet contractions somewhere in Las Vegas with the rest of her sinful kind. Inside her drug-addled mind, she is bleeding to death on a noir-inspired rooftop, looking for a hero. It does not matter anymore, because her time is over. The shadow she cast over my everything is lifted. I am here and I am free at last.

Free at last. Ahead, the sun squats until only its burnt orange rim peeks over the confluence of skyscrapers and angled roofs that make up downtown Saint Louis. Sweeping in a sterling silver curve, the Gateway to Westward Expansion, A Monument to Indian Killing, the Arch is burnished gold by reflected rays.   

The heat is stifling – a thick blanket of humid wetness that clings to everyone and everything, leaving a shimmer of damp on every surface it coils and caresses. Beads of sweat pool and run in competing sprints around the porcelain rim of my mask until surface tension loses versus volume at the chin, and it drips free to stain the material of my lap a midnight blue from cerulean. A gunshot rings out in the distance, and someone is presumably killed for no good reason at all. Senselessly, callously. Without purpose.

It is so wasteful.

Such reckless use of death. Lacking in finesse, in imagination. In the mad desire to kill, they do not pause long enough to understand everything the act entails. Thoughts turn immediately to what I imagine is the freshly surgically repaired body of my Dissipated Hurricane, lost beneath a scratchy nylon bed sheet and tendrils of snaking tubes pumping disinfectant, blood products and painkillers into her shaking veins. A smile spreads out underneath composite, I nod to the idea of it. Approvingly.

I do hope my present gifted to excite the latter brings her sweet agony for a very long time to come.

People are so very quick – in such a terrible rush – to kill each other. You cannot learn anything if you are dead, and there are so many wonderful things we do not know yet, but could if only given the chance. The lessons. An opportunity. After all, if you kill them, they will not learn anything. A green leotard did not undermine the validity of that particular point.

Sirens wail, distorted and drawn out by doppler effect, glass and steel. Something pretending to be a breeze briefly tries to stir, but settles on tickling my sweat-exposed skin ineffectually. Its feeble efforts are cut short by the slab of broken brickwork that takes me out of sight of the wider city.

The service tunnel is an order of magnitude cooler, thermally blessed by an overhang of thick, cobbled stone which absorbs the numbing heat of day. Chunks of shattered masonry, plastic bottles bleached white and rusted fragments of broken metal clink and topple as my feet sink into the mud and the trash and the shit. Something foetid skitters by on stubby legs misshapen with tumours and boils, stopping long enough to hiss.

An iron gate washed out in orange and scabbed by corrosion hangs open, the remains of the chain and its associated padlock – still locked tight – shining utilitarian silver against the black, wet earth. Up ahead, something red stands in a still silhouette against sparkling city lights and the ground underneath my feet begins a subtle transition from dirt to metal. Soft thumps exchanged for hard, reverberating clangs.

“Why the fuck are you here?”

Cassiopeia sits on a railing overlooking the drop down to the Missouri river some sixty feet below. Her left hand is squeezed tight around the malformed metalwork and blanched white with the pressure of the hold; her right brings a dirty-brown bottle up to cherry-smeared lips and tips back the sticky dregs.

The bottle sails clear from the bridge and down. It has already disappeared from view before it ever reaches the water.

Weakness permeates every part of her being. She stinks of it. Her free hand trembles, bloodshot eyes finally unable to stand the silence of my non-reply before turning to find mine. Her face is puffed, haggard. As if the skin has been wound in tight and sharp against the skull. A wretch.

“Why?”

For such a varied thing as language, capable of incredible prose and descriptive complexity, it can be frustratingly vague. So many response, potential inquiries, it is almost–

“Why are you here?” She interrupts.

She has made such progress in the last few months, and it gives me just a moment’s pause to think about what Cassiopeia might have gone on to be if her usefulness had not so recently concluded and come to its appointed end. A useful tool, no doubt, but one that was only ever capable of a singular task … Now complete and lying in its hospital bed, panting and groaning.

I have kept her waiting long enough. “I am here to complete our final lesson.”

Her face contorts, anger flushing the skin red and making the lips draw back in something like a snarl. “You made it quite clear that I’m superfluous to requirements.”

She is. “You are,” I reply, cocking my head to the side.

Teeth bare. “Then why the fuck are you here!”

It is interesting that for all the rage she appears capable of, it has never surfaced at a moment which might help her resist all the terrible things she has become embroiled in. The missteps and mistakes – and deliberate, overt actions – that have led her to consider throwing herself off this bridge in her hometown … But we will come to that shortly.

The mewling, soul-searching desperation in her voice is unpleasant, but she has always been so patient, so I will indulge her. “I said it is time to deliver your final lesson, Miss Mearns.”

She jerks upright at the tone of that, fingers squeezing the metal railing tight. Her lips work for a few moments, either practising for what is about to come or stuck in a failure of words following the impulse to speak them. Something all too typical shimmers underneath her eyes and she roughly drags the hilt of a palm across her cheek. I am not sure why she chooses to try to hide it now, given how painfully vulnerable she so obviously is. It is pathetic.

“What’s the point …” She sighs, voice cracking like the remains of her self-respect. “You got what you needed, what you did–”

“Enough.” It is my turn to intervene; this has already taken too long and there is so much to do elsewhere. “When you began this journey with me, to walk towards Rapture, I made you a promise. An exchange. This was never transactional or some purely-one-way affair. My aim was always one of transformation, and look what we have changed. It is time now for me to give to you what you deserve …”

Cassiopeia finally breaks eye contact, and her head dips down to look at the rolling river far below. Finally, sullenly sinking below the downtown cityscape the last washed-out halo of the sun disappears and the temperature drops several blessed degrees. “I don’t deserve anything …”

“You are weak of spirit, no doubt,” I muse. She flinches. “But you could not have been any other way and still played your part as her conscience, her moral and ethical centre. It is your fragility that made you something Amber sought to protect, to override all her natural instinct and defences and leave herself vulnerable …”

The tears are flowing freely now, falling so very far down to join the rest of the water.

“I was bait …”

Very good. Despite undergoing such an intense existential crisis, she remains capable of some critical analysis. This whole tiresome process might yet be sped up. “Yes; something to tug at what was left of her heart which be in no doubt despite her protestations, still absolutely exists. I have even seen it break once.”

The image of watching Amber step out from a nondescript dressing room in Atlantic City all those years ago and abandon Fexxfield to his fate is an intoxicating one. It is difficult not to drink so deeply of the memory that there is no reason to think about anything else. No, not yet. There is too much to do to relax so completely.

“Usurp her self-control, defeat her desire not to become messily entangled with “people” and “feelings”. A cancer, in a way. To hollow out her own conviction and strength of will at the moment she needed it most. Part the gates and allow me to walk through and run then her through.”

“Willing bait,” I add. “Because you came to be a part of this beautiful thing of your own free will. And so, it is only right you are rewarded with the knowledge of what now comes next.”

She shifts her weight imperceptibly. “I already know what comes next …” and in a single moment, the straining knuckles of her hand around the barrier relax. Blood flows back into the blanched skin, turning it a bright pink. Over the minutes I have worked my way closer while she drinks her fill of woe and sorrow for herself, and the plastic phalanges of my prosthetic grip tight the collar of her summer dress just as Cassiopeia tips forwards.

Hauling backwards, she cries out in shock, pain, sadness, grief – there are too many competing feelings to accurately tell which one – and collapses into my grasp. She thrashes for a few moments, coming dangerously close to offering something like a punch, but she is slight and her will broken and so she quickly slumps.

I press the sweat-slicked ceramic of my mask against her ear. “I told you once that there are oh so many things worse than death …”

She sobs quietly, I continue. “ … And you think you have experienced them all. That is why I knew you would act rashly, like this. No, Miss Mearns, not yet. The dread that makes you think there is no reason to wake up to face another day is still to age, still to ferment and mature into something far more delicious. It is not time for you to go because you have not learned your final lesson, not yet. But here, now, is your opportunity. Your moment to learn.”

She falls back into my hard embrace, one which cares nothing for her pain or misery. Her shoulders shake, chest heaving with every agony that sputters and chokes through the tears. For a few moments she simply despairs, interspersed with an occasional attempt at speech which descends into sniffed consonants and gurgled vowels.

Dutifully, I sweep the matted blonde out from her swollen eyes with my prosthetic. Cassiopeia struggles in the impossible ambiguity of it after all; desperate for any comfort but disgusted by the notion it might absurdly be me who provides it and so she walks an impossible line – jerking forward before sinking back. Trapped between what she wants and what she hates. Just like a formerly Resplendent Hurricane.

Another gunshot rings out, and she starts up. The plastic fingers of my hand curl around a shoulder and force her back down.

“I think you knew I would be here,” I offer, as much in thought as expression. “Even in such pain and suffering, you cannot commit without some external validation. It must be exhausting to be so … Torn. To lack clarity.”

She says nothing at first, almost petulant. But the temperature continues to fall and the river continues to surge past below and eventually, Cassiopeia has no choice but to respond.

“What’re you waiting for?”

I smile. “Your blessing, to give you what you have waited so long for. The final lesson: living with the terrible things you have done in the dark, because you cannot get out and find the light.”

Her tears fall anew, but this time there is too much metal and hopelessness for them to find the river again.
 
_________________________________________________________________________________

[The Rapture]

The complex ballad of life can be summarised as a series of opportunities to embrace change. There are no constants – no meaningful ones – beyond beginning it, and ending it. The entirety of that span, between those two arbitrary points (mostly) outside of your control, is a gradual conversion from potential to reality as time moves on and the former is used up. Along the way, we all must apply the lessons taught by bitter and blessed experiences to recognise our full potential and achieve all that we can. Only then, can we be the very best version of ourselves.

Why are we here, if not to improve? To grow? And as anything which lives and scrapes together sufficient cognitive ability to recognise that fact, pain and its associated miseries are such a wonderful method for stimulating growth. Nothing easy, after all, was ever worth having.

To plateau is to die the little death. If you are not moving forwards, you are moving backwards. It is with some disbelief then that I find myself doing the unthinkable and repeating what has gone on before. Regression is a hard and closed fist to my existence, because it is forced on me by those who either should know better or do and think nothing better of it. Nothing new, only a retread of a story that was worn-out the first time it was opened and read. A book which has no new lessons to tell me, because I have already moved from cover to cover and found it wanting.

An insult. A tyre iron to the shoulder, to draw another intoxicating memory out. Such sweet
Oblivion.

To be granted the chance to learn these lessons, to sit underneath the shade of the hot sun for a while and listen, truly that is a wonderful gift for anyone to receive. Eagerly. And I have dispensed so much of my wisdom across this company and its assets: delivering choice education to those who have carried its subsequent scars onwards as permanent reminders. These wounds I gift as lessons. Each made choice and carefully inflicted, something I am only so pleased to provide safe in the knowledge those that limp and grimace and grip the edges of their sinks in the morning, racked with the pain of those lessons, have taken all my words and agonies to heart. It is in my own small way a contribution to the betterment of others.

And yet, Crystal, you are here again. With a new name.
Again. Not only have you failed to show the proper appreciation and respect for the effort I previously gave to disavow you of your flaws, you have embraced the very weakness I so generously showed how to purge. Whether through ignorance or spite, you have chosen to commit the most serious insult I can think to suffer:

Wasting an opportunity I have gifted you; turning away from the lessons I have taught and wrote in scars against your skin and on your mind. Did you experience insufficient pain, necessitating a second dose of reality? I am interested in whatever it is you feel you did not receive the first time you were so brutally put down.

To all those welcomed to my Rapture I gave such time and effort. None were dismissed, although some were treated with the appropriate lack of respect they deserved. A few were targeted with extreme prejudice, as Miss Hernandez can attest. I have not seen her in a while – presumably still walking the block she formerly dominated, now made resident in rent-controlled accommodation courtesy of the reigning Internet Champion.

Was I not generous in my attention? In my haste to move on to deliver my grand design, do you feel as if the pain you suffered was not everything you hoped for? Is this some sadomasochistic attempt to wound yourself for the pain you have caused others?

Is this about Seleana? I regret that there is not the time to spare to dissect that again.

There are such masterful things at work now which demand my attention and effort, and I regret there is precious little time for me to uplift the Bombshell Division at the pace I have done so previously. There are so many deserving women waiting for their opportunity to embrace change through the twin pleasures of misery and suffering, by my thorn-painted hand.

There is one in particular who now carries a heart that used to belong to someone else. Something I would be most interested in reclaiming on her broken behalf. If only because it would wound her more deeply than even the exquisite agonies I have already visited against her. But that is not the task to prosthetic (hand). No, instead I must deal with a Ghost of Zdunich Past. A step backwards instead of forwards.

So consider how deep that depth of insult will be to see you stand opposite on Sunday in Phoenix, Arizona. Lessons already dispensed, wisdom offered – and turned away by likes of you. It is more than disappointing. It is unacceptable. Who are you to deny me? A so-called Hall of Famer who has spent more time in pursuit of success than enjoying it? A handful of precious memories strung out on lights joined by year-long toil in nothing of importance at all. The other Zdunich in name and spirit.

Seleana could do so much better I think.

Over the past few months I have set about building a vast, silver and brass edifice which will change this company. My Celestial Machinery. Its intricate parts fashioned with painstaking precision, built on all those who have come before me and been made better – and enraptured – for it. Even you, before your insistence on a second attempt at the impossible. All it lacked was a heart to power it, to give it life so that my vision, my grand design could at last be enacted.

And that heart began to beat last weekend, when I took it from Amber Ryan’s chest and set it in its place alongside mine. After all, I told her she was the heart of the Rapture but I did not say the rest of her was required to facilitate that new beginning.  She will not need it anymore, anyway – for I have gifted her the greatest kindness of all; absolution. Freedom from suffering and the ambiguities of who she is versus who the world would like to see. A beautiful mercy. A hurricane, dissipated.

Now, Amber can return to the second man to make the mistake of crossing her path with any permanence. Her gift for bringing suffering to others is matched only by her capacity for self-delusion in the face of the obvious. Still, where Mister Bane is diminished, my Songbird is uplifted. It is all in service to the grand design.

Curious that accolades – Championships – do not stay long with the males she invites onto her web. An entomological mystery we do not have time to examine, since there is never to be another chapter in the Case of the Hurricane that Thought it Could … But Could Not.

Still, there is one aspect to her absolution which gives me a moment’s pause. Amber had a protege. Miss Blackthorn. She could yet be of use, depending on how deeply her scars truly run. Her story has such a gilt of tragedy that holds in tandem such appeal. A moment’s pause extends, and thoughts turn to whether I had focused on the wrong woman …

Tantalising but ultimately, another distraction. Something to be considered when I have dealt with the lesser Zdunich again. Such repetition has become boring. Blase.

Still, all of these things that are now coming to pass demand my fullest, most rapt attention … And yet I am distracted, forced to look away from perfection, my Rapture, to look down at you Crystal and ask – ironically, given the ambiguities – “Why?”

Why are you here again?

It cannot simply be because you were told, or assigned, or anything so procedural. SCW has already proven that being directed to face a particular opponent is no obstacle to avoiding them. Otherwise, I would have delivered my precious lessons to Mercedes Vargas and her partner Miss Steele, instead of Dollar Store-discount demons in faux-blood and pseudo-gore. Nobody except fools and little children called Chloe simply do what they are told within this organisation.

Why are you here again?

Are you on some newly-motivated mission to find the happiness you could not find with Seleana? Do you think you will find it in some trinket made from tarnished gold-plate and sweat-stained leather; something you have already tried and failed utterly to take from me? It is dangerous to covet something so intensely that you are willing to be dismantled. On the first occasion, I was willing to reassemble you into something groundbreaking and beautiful. This time, I will leave your parts to rust in that warm summer sun.

Why are you here again?

This world is run-through with sin, sprouting like the tufts of weeds from between cracked sidewalk slabs. The flawed stumble everywhere, their bleached existences competing for the prize of most meaningless and non-contributory. At every turn I am beset by those who should understand their role in the acceptance of the agonies they are assigned by tutors who are trained and educated; from my thorn-painted hand to the wounds on your body. And yet, they drag heavy feet against the stony ground with slack jaws and wide eyes, drawn to simple tokens of success like the Internet Championship. Lured by lights in the distance.

It is dangerous to follow lighthouses because of the lack of anything else in the dark. Just ask Miss Beaufort. There are so many roses clipped from my garden, brought up to my painted face and enjoyed. One must be careful with their thorns, though.

Crystal, you have made the final mistake in a long and inglorious career of errors by turning those wide eyes upon me a second time. You are the epitome of this Division’s bloated form – distended by averageness, engorged on fleeting moments of success as short as they are multitudinous: singular points at which your fingertips brushed against greatness before it continued on and you spiralled down.

Why are you here?

If my prose is too complex, too sophisticated, too flowing, let me offer you something crushed underfoot and deep into the shit. Under the pointed apex of the GCU Arena this Sunday, I will fucking end you.

No complex metaphors spun out on threads of allegory or metaphor. There is no divine purpose for which your suffering can act as tribute or contribution. The sole purpose of my venture at Climax Control will be to inflict such an agony on you that there will be no deluded third attempt at relevancy. You were allowed to leave our first dance together because I gifted you those moves from which to change, to grow – to become something greater than the sum of the half-dozen surnames you have carried so far. Instead, you wear your sins with the same pride you carry in your fleeting accomplishments. You have learned nothing.

You did not listen to me, Crystal and so now, you will feel. I can only talk for so long before action becomes a welcome respite. Even servomotors and actuators become tired if they are forced to repeat the same moment over and over again. Does it not shatter you? To repeat every mistake as it is the first time of making? Drain every sinew, hollow out your bones?

Why are you here?

I will put you flat on your back, staring up at the spinning overhead lights, blood pooling in a halo of failure drawn all around a head that is filled with such incredible imagination to believe you – the
other Zdunich – could ever deign to take my gateway, the Internet Championship, from my cold, dead hand. I have turned this accolade, previously a bauble of the former most Dominant Bitch on the Block, into a place of education. Of learning. Here, the brave and the eager and the foolish all jostle for a chance to be transformed. To be given new purpose. Enraptured.

You were once given such an opportunity. Look how you have squandered it, like your marriage and the latest iteration of a life that has been reset so many times that the latent memories of each previous failure begin to form some gestalt additional failure of its own. So many past lives lived in misery, they become some homogeneous error that follows you around for all time.

Sweep those blue locks that induce visual cortex migraines out from your glassy eyes and see what has been achieved in my grand design. I have taken the mightiest Champion of recent time, one who worked three hundred and fifty seven distinct miracles, who defeated all comers again and again and again and broke her. Dissipated her winds, quelled the storm and remade stormy skies sunny. You bask in the warmth of a world without Amber Ryan, who would just as surely dispose of you at the second as twelfth attempt, because I willed it. Because I wrote it. Because I delivered it.

Why are you here?

Is it something more simplistic? Is it less title glory or redemption you seek, but absolution in your complete and total destruction? Tell me Crystal, have you grown tired of the emptiness that comes from being a walking falsehood? An example of bravado, of ego looking for a justifiable reason to exist? Have you simply come to Phoenix this Sunday to die? I will be only too pleased to expedite your request. You stand at the midpoint of a peak you could not climb even before you first understood the difficulty of the ascent, when naivety as to the scale of an insurmountable challenge was still an ally, at least notionally. You have only become older, slower, more fearful and less sure in the intervening time and somehow, you believe this qualifies as reasonable grounds for a second attempt?

Is there a numbness that takes your heart in its nothingness and squeezes tight? A reflection in a six-dollar motel bathroom mirror which looks like you but does not feel like you. Does not feel at all. A paralysis of spirit that leaves the body to move, to respond; to fight and flight but on some autopilot that steers you from one disaster to another. Tell me, Crystal, is your skin cold to the touch? Do you fear failure as much as the success that has eluded you for such vast swathes of the disappointment otherwise marked as a career?

Do you miss the way it feels to be validated? To be something. Someone. You are so very far from home, Miss Zdunich, but there is no path back to Kansas that runs through the Rapture, for I am it made manifest; a swirling vortex of change that has turned this Division inside out and to pause my great work to focus on you is an affront. An offence. You are nothing and that is where you will be returned, so completely neutered and rendered harmless that you will be left to compete with Miss Benton for softest in head and weakest in spirit. A contest more suited to your skillset to emerge as runner-up.

I destroyed Amber Ryan, and that makes me mighty. You have destroyed nothing more significant than a marriage.

Why are you here?

There is one final permutation to explain away the unexplainable. A final solution to the question that has been maddening in its simplicity versus rational justification. Perhaps you are here, Crystal, not because you think you can win, or because you seek an expedited end, but because those with influence and power have realised too late what has come for them and their precious Division – and company.

They were only too pleased to turn their masked boogeywoman on those that frustrated or inconvenienced them. A weapon to be freely employed in reminding those with ideas not consistent in assigned stations of the consequence of crossing authority. You would be a strange choice, Crystal, given your clear inferiority but how many other loyal foot soldiers remain who would take that order at all? There are better candidates to take my lessons and attempt to teach me, but they either will not or cannot do such bidding. Miss Johnson, our current World Champion, is the former. My Dissipated Hurricane, the latter because she cannot stand without medical intervention.

After all, I am not sure your acting career is one to provide sufficient income for the life you have become accustomed to. There is little call for someone who can so effortlessly wield failure and underachievement – a limited skillset in this industry of sanctioned violence and unpleasantness.

There is one aspect by which you can take comfort in what is about to happen to you – again. You will be an exclusive audience of one to a truly memorable moment. Free from the concerns of false goddesses and their compassion-based poisons, it is time for me to deliver my vision to all and sundry. I have walked a long and shining road inlet with the precious metals of all those who have sacrificed themselves: roses, dominant bitches, darling dreamscapes, strange beasts … You. This has prepared the way but the true work is not yet done, and we have a little further to go. The summit of this Division beckons, one which was formerly occupied by a Hurricane but is now the residence of a Superhero. I think it is the perfect place for a Rapture.

You represent a pause I was not prepared to make. With so much to do and so much pain to prepare to inflict, this is a distraction I do not welcome. Still, some wonderful things can spawn from the spontaneous, the unforeseen. The unrehearsed.

On Sunday, Crystal, there will be no script despite the fact that you have already had a rehearsal for what is about to happen to you. No lessons. No place on offer in the Rapture because it is no longer something on the horizon, but a tangible and glorious change here, now. Whether you act as collateral damage which escaped its first scheduled appointment with destruction, or an exclusive audience of one, it does not matter. You are not fodder or fuel – you are simply in the way. Perhaps the question as we prepare to do this again is not so much why you are here, but who you are.

Have cheap motels and B-Movie supporting roles worn thin like the threadbare carpets you pad barefoot over? How did you know she was sick of you? Was it a sudden dissociation at the end of a pink bakelite phone, or the long death of a love suffocated by distance and tamped by apathy? These are the same questions I asked you before but this time, the answers mean nothing to me.

Perhaps, they mean nothing to you. Or at least, the real you.

It must be difficult to pretend to be someone else. Not in terms of profession – but to deny the truth of yourself, to yourself. To spend so long building a facade to present to a world which did not ask to know you and does not care; a silent fortress taken from one of your many silver-screen hits that reveals its flaws and compromises when the camera pans a little too closely. Thick black walls that sport curious patches of white, where hasty primer peels off to reveal soft polystyrene underneath.

I already know you more deeply than any of those who have lent you a new surname over the years. It is impossible to hurt someone as I have hurt you and not know them intimately. Indeed, this is the only aspect of you which truly surprises me, Crystal: that you have chosen to change nothing – to repeat the same mistakes and missteps and assume that providence, god or a wet ring apron will intervene to get it right for you this time.
Is it ignorance? Or the result of some deep-seated soul searching in the few moments before you step through thick felt curtains and pretend you are not walking to your doom.
again.

Perhaps, the question you should ask yourself is not why you are here, or who you are … But when.

When will you feel anything, ever again?

On that singular subject, given careful definition, I would be so pleased to help provide the answer: Sunday, in Phoenix.

Welcome to the Rapture.

 

20
Symphony of the Iron Underbelly, Movement No. XI – Something Beautiful

__________________________________________________________________________________

[The Present – Calico Basin, Mojave Desert, USA, Summer 2022]

I taste salt on my lips and feel the Sun in a bright blue sky. The composite on my face warps under the lightest touch, a strange convergence between thermal-induced plasticity and because it is simply too hot to tolerate touching for any length of time with bare fingers. A ring of damp circles my face where the tightness of the ratchet pinned to the back of my head traps sweat, keeping it from cooling the flushed-red skin of my neck.

I trade inevitable pain for more time, and my burnt fingertips come away smeared in oily white as the paint on my mask breaks down under such intense heat. The parasol in my prosthetic twirls and whirls and the lace patterns make cotton-shaped blurs. Through the material made translucent by angular momentum, I can see something beautiful behind a windscreen smeared by splattered insect entrails and grit.

She is out of her element. Unsure. Such arid climes are no place for a Hurricane, after all. Annoyance trades places with confusion as they battle for supremacy over her expression, all to the tuneless, reverberating rumble of an idling engine. A high-pitched whine pierces the bassiness, the cooling fan spinning up to its highest speed as it labours to cool a motor itself struggling to provide the conditioned air that is stopping those red locks from plastering themselves against a scowling face.

Sweat pools in the folds of my knee and hip, underneath the crisp white material of a loose dress that billows all around. Where the hem falls into the sand, the action of the wind progressively buries it under shifting ochre tides of grit. If I stood here long enough, the desert itself would swallow me up.

Not today, because we will be taking such significant steps as to end up in a very different place from where we started.

Today is her rebirthday, and I have brought her something beautiful as a gift. The truth. But like any disruptive, determined tearaway that is not what she wants.

My skin burns in the sun, but I have a greater tolerance for pain than she has patience for my bullshit and eventually, the truck door swings open on groaning pistons.

She makes some idle and combative comment regarding wicked witches and the colour black. A curious thought comes over me. How do we know that Glinda was a good witch? Her actions are ruthless, premeditated. She must have known that Dorothy would arrive precisely when she did and with the vehicle of her arrival being that of a house, dropped directly on one of her own kind. A rival. A threat for power and glory in Oz …

I shrug. “Still, you came.”

“Despite my lack of feline qualities,” Amber replies, “I like to think I’ve got a few more lives to rattle off…”

She has less time than she knows. “Curiosity, then? Even at this late stage, in our penultimate chapter together, you are still not entirely sure what this is.”

I gesture with my parasol in a wide circle, before directing its point back at Amber. “What this is.”

“What this is, isn’t my pressing question. Why we are in the desert during the middle of summer is more concerning – I get that I’ve said before I have a death wish, but this isn’t the way I envisioned going out.”

“This is an end, of sorts,” I reply, cocking my head to the side. A dollop of liquified paint rolls from an edge of the plastic over my face and drops down to hiss in the dry sand. It leaves a streak of dirty primer behind and down my cheek. “You are here because this is the most appropriate setting for your rebirth.”

“Rebirth? Please tell me you aren’t about to start waxing lyrical and quoting Bible verses – I’m not sure I could emotionally handle having come out here to be accosted by the inaccurate writings of the ‘Good Book’. I swear if I hear the word ‘salvation’ I might actually just throw up.”

Swallowing the salt on my lips, I begin a slow circle around the redhead. “Start? Oh my Resplendent Hurricane, we are so very far from where we began. This is not the start – that came when you chose to walk out on the man you thought you loved and left him to my merciful attention, before he was replaced and rendered obsolete. This is not the start, but the end.”

The sun reaches its zenith and burns all the more intently. “Bible verses? No. There are no Gods, no Kings. Only men and the monsters they create. Or are. Like you.”

Amber shakes her head. “Not like me at all. We’ve established that – you don’t get to pigeonhole me cause it happens to self-service your precious Rapture. We are a partnership after all, not a martyrdom.”

She resists. Of course she does. I do not intend for these lessons to be so painful, but she is a difficult pupil. “Pigeonhole? Like all the others have already done so? A damsel in distress; a fuckup in need of fixing. I am not the one offering you salvation – they are. I am not the one trying to force their reality upon you and your life. I am the only truth you know.”

I step forwards, until we stand melting face-to-face. “The Rapture is all you have left, Amber, and before you leave this place, you will embrace it.”

She laughs. That ever-present mixture of self-assuredness and arrogance, tinged with the rusted patina of doubt.

“You know, you tend to say that alot. ‘All I have left’ but the more I come to think of it… The more I start to wonder if I’m actually not the one walking around with their eyes closed.”

This lesson needs to be learned more quickly. My prosthetic drives into her cheek with a whir of servomotors. Her eyes react more quickly than any other sense and she squeezes them shut, blinded at the glare caused by the sun reflecting against the white paint of my plastic forearm. Black thorns bleed into waving ribbons.

The redhead, caught flat-footed, sprawls out across the hot sand. She swears under her caught breath, but does not immediately launch up to respond. Empirical evidence that the change she is rallying against so intently has truly manifested. Data which informs everything I have said. Everything I have believed. Soon, she will believe it too.

“I’m gonna pretend like I did something to deserve that…”

She spits clear a pink, frothy mix of equal parts blood and saliva. It congeals and bakes on the desert floor. “Cause if I don’t… I’m worried that this is just going to devolve into something other than the civil conversation we were otherwise engaged in …”

“Which, basically, what I’m trying to say is… Are you fucking done?”

I stand over her and the parasol raised above my head blots out the worst excesses of the sun. Thick ropes of white paint continue to run, making black primer claw marks that rake my mask.

“I am bored of this,” I reply, evenly. Cooler than the blistering desert air can possibly manage in thermal equilibrium. “There was a little hope that you would reach this final stage in your rebirth independently, but I can see you require one final push. It is not a question of if I am done, but whether you are.”

Sinking down onto my knees, I spin the parasol in my hand. Strobes of sunlight punch a staccato rhythm through the fabric pattern. “Tell me, Amber. Did you ever answer the question you did not think you had come to ask me all those weeks ago? About what you did, and why you did it …”

“Did you think about him? About all these people who inexplicably step in to save you from yourself without invitation, without need? Oh, the list grows so very long now. Fexxfield, Knox and the man you profess to love today, at least. Your husband. Tell me, Amber … Did you lose the World Championship on his behalf?”

Her ragged voice cuts across the hot air, something approximating frustration and fury. At me, without doubt, but equally so herself.

“You don’t get to stand there with a God complex and try to tell me that you understand [i[everything[/i] as though you’re somehow infallible. You bleed, you die. You’re just as fucked as the rest of us – so lets cut the proverbial bullshit perhaps so that we both might not die of delusion.”

With a sharp twist, I separate my prosthetic at the stump of my forearm and toss it over. on top of her. “Infallible? Are you blind as well as willfully ignorant? Are you stupid?”

“I have bled more than you ever will,” I continue, tugging down the neckline of my dress to expose the knot of scar tissue running down and inside. It does not make me a God, only a prophet for a greater truth as revealed to me. The groundwork for that truth is that you are a fucking liar.”

“Even now, you wrestle with such pathetic feelings as guilt, remorse. For your lost heart, for his lost Championship. Could you have done more? Should you? Was this all your fault? Poisoning yourself with compassion.”

I climb up to standing. “You mewl like a doe, uncertain. Lost, while professing strength and power. You talk of gods, but it seems that you are truly divine given your ability to deliver three hundred and fifty seven consecutive miracles with such insipid, tender, flaccid weakness. I have only one question.”

Cocking my head to the side, scorching my remaining fingertips against the slick plastic, I look down at Amber Ryan as she was for the final time.

“When will you wake up from this distorted reality and emerge the vengeful angel you were always meant to be?”

She stands, but there is no setting of that bruising jaw cupped with a hand. Her shoulders remain relatively relaxed, free fingers unballed. If Amber carries aggression in her step it is buried too deep for me to easily see. What is more obvious, closer to the surface, is a dawning realisation of the reality she now finds herself within.

“Why is it you think this is all a dream to me?” She replied. “Like I haven’t been awake all this time? Is it such an absurd notion that I could walk through three hundred and fifty seven miracles, one after another and never acknowledge that they are more than any other passing day?

Maybe I am stupid, but it's not nearly for the reasons you think I might be…”

Even in coming to terms with this truth, she must always do so on her terms. There must always be an “out”; a caveat – a rule for her and no-one else which allows for cast-iron facts to be smelted down for reforging into a form more pleasing to her idiosyncrasies.

And then, it shines through like the brilliant sun. Something beautiful, at last.

“I can’t pretend to continue ignoring the signs, can I?” She says. ”Not really. Neon will always light up the dark – but be damned if the universe around us would see such determinations dissipate. Miracles are deemed as such for their rarity. Can you truly believe I have any left to spare?”

“Yes,” I reply simply. Because it is the most obvious element of the truth to be accepted. “I believe in you.”

“... Then maybe we’re both stupid. Or perhaps we’re just ahead of the curve. I’m not made of miracles, my reach towards the stars is only so far and belief isn’t a step stool that will spare me precious inches.

I can’t just blindly believe ‘cause you’re taking me by the hand and saying you won’t throw me off a cliff, even though we’ve danced at its precipice. I won’t ask for something tangible, cause I don’t believe faith works that way – however I can’t deny the need to try.”

And the moment is so close, it feels like a burgeoning miracle. “Falling from a cliff is not your fate. To climb again the mountaintop that you held supreme command of for three hundred and fifty seven days and hold it until the rock erodes to nothing and the seas boil to dust and still they will not take it from you. I will bleed all over again to make sure of it.”

My only hand runs down the side of her face, gently cupping the welt swelling up along her jawline. “My Resplendent Hurricane … I only ask for your effort. After all, God loves a tryer.”

Amber does not flinch under the touch, and the heat of the desert dissipates into a cold chill; making a draft between us which prickles sweat-slicked skin. She remains still until oh so subtly, she leans into my touch. Such a small gesture of trust; implied without a word and yet speaking volumes of what has finally come to transpire in the deserts of Nevada.

My eyes roll closed at the slight pressure against my hand and my lungs fill deeply with the grit in the air. An indescribable euphoria overtakes all my remaining senses as finally, blessedly, she takes the final step over the threshold.

Our grand design is completed and the celestial machinery of the Rapture spins at full effect for the first time. It is something beautiful to behold, as is she. A Living Weapon that shrugs off the last vestiges of compassion, unrestrained and unfettered by trifling things like morality. In my mind’s eye I am bathed in the sweet warmth of all the awful, terrible things we will do together in pursuit of absolute victory and, mercifully, salvation.

Here in the acrid heat and sweeping dunes, something that will change all the world has taken root without a single onlooker or neutral observer. What returns to Sin City is not what left it.

The warmth in my palm has nothing to do with the powerful sun blazing high in the sky and is, instead, derived entirely by the knowledge that a new and glorious age has begun, led by a new and terrible angel.

And she is mine.


_________________________________________________________________________________

[The Rapture]

In a roiling furnace full of feeling – a crucible filled to its warped rim by the sum rage and pain of all the wrongs it has collected over a lifetime – I have seen something beautiful. Bubbles of molten oxide swell in obscene globules, bursting at their apex in a shower of fury that scalds and strips flesh from the bone. Even the reinforced container groans and twists with the strain; despite being purpose-built for such a task, its hard life has all but leached the last dregs of resistance out and left brittle, carbonised slag behind.

Nothing lasts forever. Did they think containment would last likewise?

I have seen something beautiful, and she is resplendent.

It has been such a very long time waiting for her transformation to reach its concluding phase – precisely because it is not something that can be delivered externally, controlled and manipulated to pour all that rage and pain and wrongs into a predetermined mould to produce the shape of things to come. Such a calculated act would produce nothing of value, if it produced anything at all. She cannot be so easily directed.

No, this – all of this – has come from within. Enabled by my thorn-painted hand? Perhaps. Resourced appropriately to grow and twist in gnarled, spined tendrils up to occlude the Sun and her stars? Possibly. Adding fuel ensures the good and proper conflagration, but it cannot initiate such an event. Without that self-actualisation, that self-detonation, there is nothing to watch burn so brilliantly.

Have you watched her in the throes of it? When the second-guessing, hesitation and those associated superfluous moral and ethical meanderings are left behind in the sweat-slicked spin of combat? When she hurts and is hurt, and all that matters is the next evasion; the subsequent parry and blow to the gut. Trepidation is the preserve of those with time to think about why they are doing something and not simply how to do it. In those moments, she is a force incarnate, as befitting swirling vortex winds and their associated non de plum.

A Hurricane … But that is about to become a pseudonym; rendered anachronistic post-Rapture, as she emerges  new and remade into a Living Weapon. Not by my subtle machinations – who could convince Amber Ryan to do anything she did not at least think she wanted to do? Not her husband and former World Champion, Mister Bane, and not the man who took that title from him. My Songbird.

Certainly not me. That is the great truth that has sat so proudly on display in shining brass and burnished metalwork, free for any to gather under and marvel up at its intricate functions. The truth that I have spoken only cold-welded reality unto her.  I have shown her only what others have dressed in gaudy robes and bright colours to hide the brutalistic nature of it all.

Compassion is the poison of the soul.

Oh, how they have all tried in their own way to steer her course more to their liking. Rescue whatever strange version of Amber they see through their own warped mind’s eye, regardless of her own wants and desires. Look inside that raging maelstrom painted red, and you will find such a variety of pain and sorrow and fury that it will burn as quickly as it sates. Look inside the distorted internals of a wayward angel and be forever changed. Split the atom and bathe in its irradiating glow.

Peel the inspection port cover back on the face of the reactor, even as its heavy graphite blocks shudder and jump in their fuel housings, and go wide-eyed at the catastrophe coming apart underneath your melting shoe leather … But do not look away. Not yet. Just a little longer, and you will see a brilliant new star born.

A fraction of a moment before you are utterly destroyed, to the point even the memory of you is scoured from existence. This Sunday, we will all witness such a terrible birth to paint the skies with a radioactive pall, and poison the land in all directions and everything it contains.

A lonely Ferris Wheel, rusting in the undergrowth. Orange and embrittled. Broken. An Iron Maiden, if you will.

Disabuse yourself of the simplistic, childish notion that I am working some nondescript magic to coerce or control Miss Ryan. Nothing could be further from the truth. I have not sabotaged the reactor – all I have done is lead you all to its lead-lined containment building bursting with overpressure, groaning and creaking and begging for release at the moment of its complete failure.

So you can enjoy the pleasure of dancing in the steam and hydrogen explosions.

Still, there must be a vehicle to enable such annihilation and it has already changed course markedly once. For the first time my Resplendent Hurricane, so newly Raptured, comes to my side and we will work hand-in-plastic-hand. The question of who will be laid down at our feet as proudly sacrificial lambs to be baseball batted to death, is settled. Gone is the duo of Miss Steele and Miss Vargas – the latter content enough to sift datapoints and identify trends, without contributing to the body of work that inspires the former. Instead, something trying much too hard to be wicked this way comes.

Instead, we have Iron Maiden and Twisted Sister.

Elemental rhymes scored into grease-stained fast food boxes aside, The duo are labouring under a fundamental misunderstanding as to who is to be reckoned with at Climax Control. There are no such things as monsters; only monstrous people and despite their pantomime-esque trappings and B-Movie worthy hyperbole, they are pretending to look dangerous in a concrete complex full of twenty-to-life killers. Across from them will stand one of the most dominant competitors this company has ever seen or ever will see, and by her beautiful, irradiating side stands said company’s Internet Champion. Appointed by implicit defeat of the previous incumbent as the most dominant bitch on the block, courtesy of Miss Hernandez’s overactive mouth and underactive imagination.

You step into the penultimate chapter of a book that has already been written, and the ending allows for no twists in narration. It has been ordained, assembled from my grand design into something shining and palpable and tangible as it swings and whirls. You merely assume the form of the sacrifice necessary to allow a Living Weapon to reach critical mass: some defined threshold of totality beyond which all the concerns and critiques, wonders and wherewithals are flashed to steam and vapourised along with whatever token resistance you put up in that momentary, involuntary jerk of muscle memory and pain reflex.

And there will be such pain. The ultimate tutor, through which all the truly worthwhile lessons of life are transcribed. No ghoulish, Halloween-haunts or smeared makeup but only the select miseries that two persons trained in the subtle art of agony can inflict on two others. And we have been training for so very long and our craft is so very well honed.

There is no place for you in the Rapture, because it has already been and gone and delivered to us a new embodiment, a new agent and child of true chaos. That avatar will stand before you on Sunday, and educate you in a way no amount of bus shelter-scrawled, nonsensical ramblings can meet in depth of suffering or portent of witless doom.

Neither of you were even supposed to be here, and that is not commensurate with the level of relevancy to everything that is ordained and planned. Unknown variables to be dealt with promptly, lest they trigger a more sustained immunological response.

Aggressive treatment then, to exercise this cancer of chance encounters before it metastasizes into something altogether more threatful to the plan. In this singular way, you present something that gives me long enough pause to consider a response. In this small potential for disruption, there is the slightest flicker of relevancy which you should cling to adrift on this rolling and black sea, because it will grant you a few more wretched minutes of life before sinking into the brine.

There is no opportunity here to derail our significant works, because there is no inflexion point or alternative path from which to branch off to. What has been set in motion now cannot be stopped, impeded or otherwise changed. The question is not if, but when. However it has been described to convince you to intervene, this is not an opportunity. It is simply a confirmation. 

You have appeared fashionably late to a party ready to frolic and let-loose, but the occasion has come sombre and the gentle tinkle of cutlery-on-glass draws the attention of all the invitees to the grand design, its majestic reveal. The great beyond. Cease your discount-store tribute to some Necronimicon and listen as everything that has been so painfully laid out comes full circle in some reality-bending Mobius Strip, that skirts causality and stretches the stuff between worlds to breaking point.

I think you are in love with the idea of the occult, the forbidden. The dark. On Sunday, courtesy of the Rapture, I will stand with my Resplendent Hurricane and show you a reality that is far worse than even the most opiate-overdriven feverings of Victorian Horrorcore. You will not have to gather in covens or whisper secret words under an errant moon – we will show you all these terrible things lit up at kilowatt intensity by the bright stage lights of the Galen Center, overhead.

What use is a Book of the Dead or the kinds of people who embrace its macabre message? Those that are gone have nothing left to teach us because invariably, their lessons are flawed given early departure. Failure bound in vellum, scribed on parchment in animal blood. All very unsettling, but ultimately useless. Especially when there are things so much worse than death to contend with …

While this company’s attention has been craned up at its mountaintop, watching my Songbird clash with Bane; curious to see whether Rivers or Johnson will emerge as the most magnificent Bombshell of them all … They have failed to keep track of the path being hewn around and up to that summit. Not driving wind, torrential rain or the best efforts of loudmouths or silly little girls have slowed our progress and cragged rock has given way to smooth, sculpted stone. We are but a few steps from the peak and in their panic, they turn now to look at the defences available …

… And send you. Some poor facsimile of a Witch’s Coven, cackling and plotting and sending messages with the tonal complexity and menace of fanfiction pulled from the darkest recesses of Twilight subreddits. Are you supposed to represent genuine opposition to our progress? Or is there something more complex at work? Perhaps this is merely a test to determine with how much impunity we will pass straight through your otherwise meaningless intervention.

Do you feel the excitement? It squeezes the heart and makes the fingers tremble. It has been such a long time building, gestating inside a well of distortion and emotion-blown wind until finally ready to step into being as an angel reborn. She is something beautiful, something terrible and while I did not create it, I cannot help but feel a swell of pride as I watch this Living Weapon clamber over the crumbling lip of the mountainside, sink into the snow of the summit and know that none who call it home will make it out alive.

Weeks ago, I might have told you not to fear this. That the application of pain through the vehicle of misery, or suffering, would bring a cleansing liberation. A new outlook. A Rapture. But that is no longer the case, for we have transitioned beyond the need for new components to complete my grand design. Our grand design. Instead, you are obstacles to be smashed aside and destroyed.

You should fear this. Beyond portents of doom and talking gargoyles – something visceral. Stomach-churning. You are the first to fall in a new era of resplendence; that piercing scream that makes others snap their heads back in reflexive horror and clutch their fingers in tight to fists. Perhaps I have been unfair in writing you off as nothing but fodder. I think there is a role that you can play for me.

Be my siren. Long and keening, vibrating the bones inside sweat-slick meatbags as they blanch and baulk and think about how they will get out of this – Oh my God there must be a way – and announce our coming. A trumpet call, a wailing drone of doom that distils all that existential dread into the purest cocktail ready for delivery. Ready for injection. In this way, you can be granted some small semblance of comfort in your contribution. Fall for us quickly, and conserve your energy for the roiling bell of agony you will sound all across this company. They will hear it at the catering tables and in the management suite, and they will break the plastic pens in their fat fingers in reaction.

And none of it will matter. In their greed they have allowed me to move unchecked. In their banal interpretations of my motivations, reduced to some two-dimensional villain, they have assigned me as some faceless enforcer or spectre and used me accordingly. As a boogeywoman to strike fear into those silly little girls who cross their hypermasculine paths. It served my purpose – served our purpose.

Carefully, softly treading, I have eviscerated the rank-and-file of the Bombshells Division such that now all that remains is their lofty Champion and a handful of capable fighters circling to cut her down. Woefully insufficient to stop what is about to come for them.

Three Hundred and Fifty Seven Days. It is not enough. She will take it back and you will all die old and cold in your beds before the counter resets further. It is far too late to call for reinforcements, pack the field with new contenders to slow our approach. Even your so-called hand-picked fodder can see the ludicrousness of resisting. How long did it take Steele and Vargas to (im)politely reject your offer of being dismantled physically and mentally and returned to sender in pieces? You do your so-called talent a disservice by, if not underestimating their intelligence, then underestimating their will to survive.

They will not come to help you as the Bastille is stormed and you are lined up against the gold-gilt wall they paid with broken backs and spirits to clad. Those that chose the expediency of living to fight someone else another day will simply watch us destroy it all and perhaps, they will sift through the detritus and wreckage – and offal – and pick the bones for value. Or they will drift away, as the wandering spirit which imbues so many in this industry often drives them to do. A few might think of rebuilding, trying to get back what has been lost forever; an era they were never a real part of and yet feels inexorably part of them.

But now that ends. It is time for this company to enter a new era; a defining cultural and business epoch from which such changes will be wrought that they shall be visible from where the stars draw their stories and their shapes in-between each other.

It will be magnificent. Resplendent. Something beautiful.

I cannot welcome you to the Rapture … Because you are already inside it.


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