In the Public Eye: Part 32

“Why are we going this way then?”

“The tunnel I used to go through collapsed during the rainstorms we got near the end of August. This is the only other one I know about,” Vaughn said.

I couldn’t see anything. Was I supposed to go down there and locate the gun by the flash from its muzzle? If I was lucky, the gun was fixed and capable of firing in only one direction. If I was unlucky, it had the ability to track targets. My armor did well against bullets, but I didn’t feel much of an urge to test its limits.

“Haley, can you see anything?”

“Just a hallway. The door’s maybe fifty feet away from us. No… Wait. I think I see a hole in the wall. Two. One on each side. They’re at waist level in the middle. I wonder if I could just crawl across the wall? Do you think I could?”

“I don’t know. It depends on what triggers the guns. Vaughn?”

“Fuck,” Vaughn said. “How am I supposed to know how the guns work?”

It felt like I was in the worst Dungeons and Dragons game ever — no equipment and no one with any skills relevant to the situation.

Finding the guns by the light generated from being shot at sounded like a better and better idea by the moment.

“OK. I guess I’ve got a plan. You guys back up the stair a bit and I’ll take care of it.”

“I’ll come along,” Haley said.

“You don’t have armor,” I said.

Vaughn said, “Yeah, no matter what happens, Nick’s not going to get hurt.”

“I’m fast enough to dodge bullets,” Haley said, “and my costume’s a standard League suit.”

Which meant that my grandfather had designed the material. It was probably made from the same stuff as the stealth suit.

“Just let me go first,” I said. “That way they’ll be firing at me. The armor can take it better than your costume.”

“Great,” she said, “Let’s go.”

“First” is a surprisingly fuzzy concept in English. It could mean waiting until I got ten feet ahead and then start to walk. It could mean following just a couple feet behind me. For Haley it apparently meant that she could crawl along the wall from the instant I set off.

Bearing in mind that I couldn’t see much of anything, I couldn’t know that for sure.

I walked down the hallway blind, wondering when I’d be hit and from what direction. The answer turned out to be “from the left and right simultaneously and at an angle.” Bullets will knock me over if I’m not expecting them, but in this case I was. It caught me mid-step and I rocked back, put my foot behind me, and held myself in place. When the bullets failed to stop, I jumped forward, aiming for the flashes of light, and started punching the wall.

It broke under the force of my blows. Chunks of concrete hit me on the helmet, the chest, the legs. My hand finally landed a glancing blow on the barrel of the gun, bending it a little, but not enough to stop the gunfire. Following the barrel back with my hand, I felt the body of the device. Pulling it to my chest, I yanked it free of its mounting and through what was left of the wall.

It stopped firing. I dumped it on the floor, listening to it crash against the ground.

It struck me that I’d just broken down a wall on whim and yanked a weapon that had been mounted to concrete free by myself. That was wild. I’d known that Grandpa could do that kind of thing and I’d known how strong the suit was, but it hadn’t ever been real to me.

Then I realized that the other gun had stopped as well.

Something grabbed my arm. From the click of claws on my armor, I guessed who it might be.

“I didn’t know I could break concrete,” Haley said. “Did you see me punch through that wall?”

“I can’t see anything,” I said.

She laughed. “Of course you can’t. Why didn’t you bring a flashlight?”

“When Vaughn said Hardwick House, I assumed there’d be lighting. What I’m wondering is why Vaughn didn’t say anything.”

Vaughn said, “I never take this way. The other tunnel had lights.”

“Well anyway, let’s go,” I said, and started walking.

Haley grabbed my arm again. “Wrong way,” she said, turning me. “The door’s over there.”

Haley had to help Vaughn through the rubble too, but within a few moments we all stood at the door. Vaughn gave Haley a series of numbers and she typed them into a keypad. The door clicked open.

In a moment, the lights turned on and we saw the cave.

It felt like a cathedral, but a cathedral to what god? Concrete supports arched upward, holding a ceiling of rock. Across from us, the wall showed a mural of Red Lightning’s symbol — jagged lightning under a golden arch with hieroglyphics. Like everything else, the mural had been blackened by fire.

Cells covered the wall to the right, reaching from the floor to the ceiling, everything in them completely visible through the bars. Everyone in the original League had been imprisoned there near the end.

Directly in front of us lay the remains of the last battle — warped metal machines, the skeletons of Red Lightning’s henchmen, and a silver dome, now ragged edged and cracked in two, rising in the middle of it all.

12 thoughts on “In the Public Eye: Part 32”

  1. Charles: You know, no one ever bothers to clean up after a big climactic battle scene. And now, yeah, there’s probably fifty years of dust to add to that. Sadly that means it’s been dusted more recently than certain parts of my basement.

    Eli: Thanks. You’ll be seeing more of it in the next installment…

  2. Sonja: Thanks. I liked it as I wrote it. In some ways I think it’s a line that draws more attention to itself than most I write.

  3. I got a chill during the scene where they step into the Lair and they witness the remains of The Great Battle, complete with the cells where the original Heroes were locked up.

    I’m seriously hankering for a miniseries to tell of how Rocket, Sr. kicked in doors and saved the day and defeated the Leagues former pal know become mega-arch-nemesis.

  4. If you didn’t catch it in the published version, you could always just say that in the final fight in the inner sanctum, there was only one henchman left, but he was able to duplicate himself into many bodies. Hence, many skeletons for only one henchman.

    Might just be better to just say “oops”

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