THE TALE OF JET AND QUARTZ
By: Darian Deamos
Chapter Four: Blowing Town
Sergeant Malcolm Stark was in a rather lot of pain. It has been several
hours since the Carmichael twins had left. He was convinced now. The two
of them had to have been the twins, not some kidnapping terrorists. What
a load of bull. With something like two hours of observation, he knew
that, and he was just a grunt.
Well, maybe not just a grunt. You didn't get the kind of position he held
if you were just a grunt. And maybe that was part of the problem. He
thought too much. Usually that wasn't a bad thing, but then again,
usually his targets weren't American kids. Even if they were MORFS
victims. Maybe that's what happened, like the kid had said. Their father
the senator was certainly well known for his position on the issue. But
still, they were his kids. Malcolm just sighed, and then winced. The com
unit in his ear chimed in, "You alright sergeant?"
He sighed again, more carefully. "Yeah," he said, softly into the mike
taped under his collar, "just thinking about how this whole thing has
gotten FUBAR."
"I hear you, solider," the voice on the other side of the com gear said,
and it actually sounded sincere. "Help's on the way."
Help, in this case, was not another Delta Force unit. It wasn't even
another military unit. It was a FBI forensics team and a local EMS team.
In yet another example of how amazingly screwed up this entire op had
been, there was no evac or contingency in place. Then again, he got the
impression that the Captain had lied about his orders. There hadn't been
any time to check this out, and he wasn't sure this had been entirely
legitimate. Thankfully, he had put his reservations down in writing, and
handed them to the officer of the watch to be given to the base
commander, so his ass was covered. The Captain however, was not. That
idiot was going down, even if only for violation of standard procedure.
Just as he was getting really worked up over it, he heard voices
downstairs, and whispered into the com, "I hear them, tell them I'm
upstairs."
"Right, sergeant," the com spat back. Moments later, he heard footsteps
coming up the stairs, and then there was an eager looking young man in a
suit, with a FBI tag hanging from his suit standing in the doorway.
"He's in here," the young agent called, and then he noticed the two
bodies. And promptly left, looking like he was about to loose his lunch.
A moment later, a woman entered, looking like she was in her early
thirties. And she was obviously a MORFS victim. She had green hair,
including her eyebrows. It could have been a dye job, but he guessed not.
Especially given her age. Her first comment confirmed it.
"Yes, sergeant, I am a MORFS survivor." She made a point of that last
word. She looked him up and down, and then he heard a voice in his head,
*We need to talk.*
Malcolm just nodded his head, and focused on thinking back at her, *Yes,
we do, but let's keep this between us.*
She raised an eyebrow at him, and calmly introduced herself. "I'm Agent
Davies, sergeant, and we seem to be in a bit of a situation here." *What
happened here.*
"My squad was wiped out by unknown MORFS survivors, after being ordered
to eliminate them," *I believe they were the Carmichael twins, post
MORFS, and that the evidence of them as terrorists and kidnapers was
manufactured. I saw no evidence supporting, and quite a bit to the
contrary.*
Her eyebrows shot up into her hair, and she whispered, "Oh god." Then, in
a more normal tone, "Were you given any reasons for these orders?" *And
you just went along with this!?*
"No, ma'am, I inquired, and was told it was classified. My objections are
down in writing, " *Hell NO! I was told there was evidence, and there was
nothing to arouse suspicion until I was on site. My objections were
overruled.*
"So, what happened? And yes, EMS is on its way."
"Thank you," *Call someone for me?* "My squad was inserted through the
balcony behind me. We entered the room, and found the white twin lying on
the bed here, in a nightgown. I ordered privates Di'Orio and McDowell to
cover her while I sent privates James, Nelson, and Lasher to the other
side of the building to eliminate her partner. I then went to put a
bullet between her eyes."
Agent Davies raised an eyebrow, and said, "Continue."
"I don't remember what happened next," *The bullet hit her right between
the eyes, and all it did was shove her head into the pillow. Well, and
wake her up. She grabbed my wrist, and pulled me down into the
nightstand, rendering me unconscious.*
"I see. Anything else?" *She was bulletproof?*
"Not really, I woke up and they were gone, I called you guys, you know
the rest," *Yeah, when I woke up, they were there, and we had a chat.
They claimed to be the missing sons of the senator, and they're either
the best actors I've ever seen, or they're telling the truth. They said
that they were going to rabbit, and didn't seem to have any agenda other
then being left alone. And yes, she was bulletproof.*
Davies eyes drew down in consternation, and she was about to say
something, when an audio message came in on the phone. There was some
shouting downstairs and then the two of them heard Quartz's voice echo
from the speaker phone in the wall.
"Hello father, or more likely, the forensic investigators. This is Quartz
Carmichael. My sister Jet and I used to be called Samuel and Daniel. We
are the offspring of Senator Michael Carmichael. We just wanted to be
left alone. That isn't going to happen. Know that we aren't going to
start a damn thing, but we'll sure as hell finish anything that does
start. Don't chase us. Leave us be. Let us live our lives in peace. Not
that I expect you to listen. It would just be nice, for once, to be
pleasantly surprised. Not that I expect that to happen. Not after what
happened to our mother and sister. The files are on the desk in my old
bedroom. Take a look. We'll see you around."
That young agent ran up to the door, and quickly looked away. Staring
studiously at the wall to his left, he snapped out, "Ma'am, we traced it.
It's a payphone at Overlook point. Henderson and Blake are already on
their way."
Davies looked at me, and then looked at the EMT's who were already
pulling the gurney past the young rookie. "Thank you sergeant, your
assistance was appreciated," was her only comment, verbally. *I'll find
them, and keep them safe.*
Malcolm stared at her as he was loaded onto the gurney. *Call Lisa
Braynt, tell her Mal could use a hand.*
Davies just nodded, and then Malcolm was rolled away. Moments later, as
he was being rolled out of the house, there was a massive explosion from
the west, and a fireball rose into the sky. Panicked shouts rose from the
mansion behind him, and the FBI agents were scurrying about madly as he
was being loaded into the ambulance. It was absolute panic out there.
Malcolm just laughed.
"Hahahah... Ow."
Quartz dropped from the edge of the cliff, and plummeted towards the
rocks below. Her sister Jet was moments behind her. She pushed her body
out, fighting the pull of her bags, and strained to angle her wings to
catch the air. When she did so, the snap and pull of the air catching in
the hollow of the wings was a shock that nearly drove the breath out of
her. But now she had something to brace against, and she angled her
plummet into a dive, and then, with her sister following in her wake, she
turned that dive slowly horizontal. She skimmed over the bay, her coat
whipping behind her, mere feet above the waves and she nearly screamed in
exhilaration. She felt a similar exuberance flowing from Jet, and the two
of them flapped a bit for altitude, That has been very close, she hadn't
counted on the bags making it so hard to get control of the plummet, and
the two of them had very nearly smashed themselves to bits.
As they swooped silently and invisibly over the bay, nothing more then
two specks to anyone watching from shore, Quartz carefully took both of
the bags in one hand, and rummaged in the inner pocked of her coat. After
a moment she found what she was searching for, and pulled the small black
disk out of her coat. Flipping it open, and making sure she had a good
grip on her bags, she hit the small button inside the transmitter,
sending a signal to the small transceiver in the bottle of mixed cleaning
supplies hidden in the niche next to the hydrogen storage matrix in the
jeep back at Overlook Point.
The transceiver got the signal, and released a small electric current
into the liquid. The current stimulated the volatile mix of chemicals,
starting a reaction of explosive dimensions. That explosion first
destabilized and breached the hydrogen storage matrix, and then ignited
the highly volatile hydrogen. The jeep, the surrounding clearing, and a
large chunk of the woods of the park went up, instantly incinerating
scores of innocent squirrels and birds, and one, poor, lone eagox that
had unfortunately wandered too close. The fireball erupted up into the
sky, sending out a deafening blast of sound that set off the car alarms
for the few cars in the lot, and woke everyone anywhere near the park.
The fireball was visible from the entire bayside, and from most of the
city.
"Whoooooo hooooooooo!" Quartz screamed, as the shockwave from the blast
sent a wave through the air, throwing the twins forward, and nearly
pitching them into the bay. Jet shot her a dirty look, though Quartz
could feel that she was just as excited by this as she was.
"You're NUTS, you know that?" Jet cried back, and Quartz just grinned at
her sister, and the two of them made their way to the opposite shore of
the bay, and landed atop a warehouse in the industrial part of town.
Jet was glaring at Quartz, and trying not to smile and Quartz could tell.
Quartz grinned back, and whispered, "I didn't think it would be quite
that big."
Jet just sighed. "So, what's the plan?"
"Freight train. Hopefully up to Seattle."
"Right, then it's the train yards."
Quartz looked at her sister, and nodded to herself. "Jet, gimme your
bags, I'll carry them."
Jet looked at her, looked surprised and a little insulted. ?What?" she
hissed.
"No offence, but you're flagging. Flying with these things is killing
you." Quartz held up her two bags in one hand. "This isn't even hard for
me, I can take yours. We're gonna need you fast and sure here, and you
aren't either, while you're lugging those things around."
Jet snarled, but handed over the bags. Quartz looked her sister in her
gemlike black eyes, and nodded, and the two of them headed off towards
the freight yards.
Twenty minutes later, the two of them were sitting on the roof of the
freight yards, with Quartz's tablet out, and a splice running into the
cable line for the building. They weren't actually in Salicia anymore;
they were in one of the neighboring towns, a much less prestigious area,
and they had run into a problem. This wasn't one of the national line's
hubs; it was the local light rail and an Amtrak hub. Useful, to an
extent, but they needed to find something that would get them out of the
immediate area, today, unobserved. Hence the hack, and the attempt to
gain access to the yard's computers.
"Crap," Quartz cursed lightly, "well, looks like a freight train to
Seattle is out."
Jet scowled again. "Why?"
"Apparently, it's cheaper to go up there by boat. Everything freight out
of here is down to San Fran. We need to find a way to get to either
Portland or Seattle and the national freight line, and then we should be
set to get into Chicago. Give me a minute." Quartz scowled at the
computer, and paged through several pages of lists, and then smiled. "Got
it, there's an Amtrak line up to Seattle with a light freight shipment
heading up there at three this afternoon. It's mostly passenger, but
there are a few freight cars on the train for things that need to get
shipped up. A mail car, three containers going all the way, and the
luggage cars plus the passenger crap. We should be good. And as a bonus,
it's one of the new maglev monorails. We should be there in about a day"
Jet nodded, and then frowned. "Food and water?"
Quartz frowned. "We'll have to hit the gift shop in the terminal and
borrow some. That or get something in Seattle."
Jet just nodded. "They'll notice it in Seattle." Quartz just shrugged.
"Well what are we waiting for," Jet said, as she rose to a crouch, "let's
go shopping."
Quartz focused herself on her tablet, and motioned for Jet to wait. "One
sec. I'm gonna try to get into the security system here."
Jet nodded, but moved over to the edge of the roof anyways, and began to
look around.
Quartz suddenly nodded, and hissed, "I'm in. Give me thirty seconds to
loop the video and you're good. This system is a joke compared to the one
at the house." She began to fiddle on the tablet as Jet began to silently
count to thirty. "There. Round the back, second door. Service entrance."
Jet's only reply was to drop off of the roof, and vanish.
From Jet's perspective, it seemed as if the world had stopped. Well, not
quite, but nearly. She watched the bird's wings flap in slow motion,
looking so slow that it seemed that she could reach out and pluck a
feather. Then she hit the gravel and she saw the individual bits slowly
start to float up like one of those shots of stuff in a null-g flight. It
was surreal. She allowed herself a heartbeat to absorb it, and then she
started sprinting. It seemed like the world around her was on pause,
almost. She saw smoke sitting there, stationary till she ran through it
and pushed it out of the way. She looked down as she ran across the
gravel in the predawn, and saw the bits of rock shift when her boots
touched them, and then immediately slow to near motionless as they
stopped touching her boots. She realized that the world wasn't stopped,
just moving really slowly. She felt a grin stretch her lips as she found
the door, and opened it.
Moving swiftly, with the world still in it's wonderful slow motion, she
noted the time on the clock on the wall, and grabbed four large souvenir
tote bags off of the merchandise rack. Moving slowly and taking her time,
she filled them with food and drink. It wasn't great fare; mostly nuts,
Twinkies, candy, soda, and assorted ready to eat food. Stuff that would
last. She didn't want to have to leave a trail till after they got out of
Seattle. She did grab an assortment of the ready made sandwiches that
were in the cooler, and looked like they would last they day un-
refrigerated. Two packages of industrial bagels and a few other odds and
ends, and she was set. She looked back at the clock, and laughed. It felt
like she had been in here for almost an hour. It had been 5 seconds.
Still, she thought, better not to push it, she was beginning to get a
headache. Moving quickly, she found that the world around her was
starting to move faster. And her headache was getting worse. By the time
she got back to under where Quartz was, her headache was blinding, and
the world around her was moving at its normal speed. She panted, and held
up the bags, blearily. Quartz nimbly jumped down, scooped her sister up,
and leapt back to the roof. She glared at her sister, and shook her head.
Quartz watched her sister blur off, leaving a trail of footprints in the
gravel. It looked like she stepped in each one almost at the same time.
She vanished around a corner before Quartz had even realized that she had
moved. Quartz just let out a low whistle. Then, a few seconds later, she
saw her sister coming back, and that alarmed her. Because she actually
saw Jet moving. She was moving insanely fast, but traceable. And she was
getting slower as Quartz watched. She seemed to return to a normal speed
a few steps before she reached the part of the building immediately
opposite Quartz, and then Quartz just jumped down, grabbed her sister,
and vaulted back to the top of the roof.
She glared down at her sister, wondering why Jet had felt the need to
overexert herself like that, and then the forced the expression from her
face. Jet didn't realize she was doing it. The two of them really needed
to figure out their abilities and Jet more so than Quartz. Time to get to
the train. But first, her tablet.
She lay Jet down and whispered a quiet admonition to lie still, and went
and closed down the hacks and uplinks she had used to gain access to the
security and scheduling systems. She repacked her gear, and put all the
bags over by her sister. Kneeling at Jets side, she whispered, "You good
to go?"
Jet nodded, blearily, and hauled her self up. "All right, I have got to
get that under control. I'll be good."
Quartz gave Jet a once over, and then nodded. "Follow me, and keep up.
You have the food." Since all four bags of food weighed less then one of
the bags of junk they had packed, Jet just nodded, and followed her
sister.
Quartz led them both along the roof for a ways, and then they glided
silently over to the car yard. It took them a few minutes to find the car
they were looking for, a few more to bypass the security code on the
door, and then Quartz was hauling the door to the cargo container open.
Jet staggered in, and Quartz climbed in, after resetting the lock on the
door to reengage after the door closed. Then she hauled the container
door shut, and the two of them were alone in the dark.
Jet sighed with exhaustion, and then there was a rummaging from one of
the tote bags, followed by a snap, and then there was a diffuse glow
filling the car. "Glow sticks," Jet called out.
"Good idea," Quartz responded, and the two of them looked around for a
place to rest. They wove in and out of the pallets, till they found the
end of the container that didn't open. Then they sat down, made
themselves as comfortable as possible, and by mutual consent, attempted
to get some sleep.
Malcolm lay back in his hospital bed. His arm was strapped to his chest,
which was taped to hold his broken ribs. His wrist was in a cast, his
shoulder was immobilized, and his neck was in a brace. He was sitting up,
watching the morning news shows, and plotting his vengeance. Upon whom he
was plotting said vengeance was still up in the air, and was being
considered in the plotting. There were, after all, several potential
targets.
The Carmichael twins were the obvious ones to blame for the fiasco. They
had killed his men, and seriously wounded him. But they had simply been
defending themselves, and he understood that. It didn't make the deaths
of his squad any easier, but it did mean that he couldn't blame the twins
for those deaths. Unfortunately.
If the opponent was out, then that left his superiors. Specifically the
colonel who issued the orders that sent his squad out. The major who had
been commanding his squad was dead, incinerated in the blast that took
out the carrier. But that meant the he could focus on that stupid
colonel. But he had to consider something else. Where had he gotten their
orders from? Who really sent them in on an assassination? There were only
really two possibilities.
The general in charge of the MORFS response brigade. He was a one star,
but still, it was technically his call. But Malcolm knew him, and this
didn't feel like his style. Too crude, and the intell was horrible. The
general knew better then to initiate an operation like this with intell
this bad. And by the same logic, so did the Special Forces command,
letting them off the hook as well. And that left only one choice.
The father. Michael Carmichael, the wealthy senator. His views on MORFS
survivors (he decided he liked that FBI lady's term) were well known. If
he was as crazy as the twins had implied, then he really was capable of
this. It was a factor that he had to consider.
He also had to consider that he was completely wrong, the colonel was
right, and there was a simply a blunder in the intell department
somewhere. But every time he tried to think that one through, his gut
rebelled, and he was certain that his initial read was correct. Those
kids were the Carmichael twins, and not some terrorists. And if that's
the case, then the entire justification for the mission goes away.
So he sat, pondering vengeance for his team, and watched the news media
wonder about what exactly happened at the Carmichael manor. It was
interesting entertainment, but that was all it was. A lot of noise and
speculation, with no real bearing on what had happened that morning. It
irritated him, but there wasn't anything else to do at the moment, so he
put up with it. But it made his mood, already black from the debacle,
fouler as each moment passed. And his mood was foul indeed when the nurse
poked his head into Malcolm's room.
"What," he snarled at the poor man, venting a measure of his irritation
at the convenient target.
"Sorry, sergeant, but you have visitors," the little man squeaked.
"And those visitors are coming in, like it or not," an imperious voice
called out from the hall. Hard on the heels of that voice came its owner,
a very attractive woman dressed in simple denim pants and a white cotton
tee. Her hair, a pale gold, seemed to gleam for a moment, and there was
the tattoo of a caduceus on her right cheek. Her smile at his glower was
radiant, lighting her grey eyes with a sparkle of a young girl. "And
you'd better like it, solider boy." Her voice was stern behind the grin
in her eyes, and her smile was infectious.
"Lisa, you pirate, when did you get here?" Malcolm's voice was light with
relief. He levered himself a little more upright in his bed, and smiled
at his old friend. "Here to spring me?"
"What'll it get me?" she asked, laughingly. Malcolm just wiggled his
eyebrows, and she laughed again. "Sure, why not, you reprobate." Turning
to the nurse, she asked for a chair to be brought and the moved to help
Malcolm out of bed. Once the nurse was gone and Malcolm was standing, she
reached around behind her and snagged a duffel bag from the hall. "Can't
have you walking around in that silly gown, now can we?"
The bag contained some clothing that looked like it fit approximately
well, and with some help from Lisa, Malcolm managed to get it all on. He
buttoned the shirt over his arm, and then tossed on the jacket. The empty
sleeve of the jacket flapped uselessly against his side, but there wasn't
anything he could do about that. He looked down at himself, and then at
Lisa, "Presentable?"
"Yup, now once that nurse gets back with the chair..." Lisa was saying,
and trailed off as the individual in question arrived with the requested
object. "And now we can get going," Lisa finished, and the two of them
headed down to the nurses station to check out, and then down to the
lobby to get out of here. On the way down, they made small talk, mostly
catching up on the details of their lives since the last time they had
gotten together. Growing up in a small town, you got to know the folks
around, and the two of them had been friends all through high school.
Malcolm had even taken her to the prom. They lost their virginity to each
other, and while they cared deeply about each other, they had both
decided that making a permanent thing out of their relationship would be
stupid. They were TOO much alike, and would undoubtedly irritate each
other. Besides, after that one time together, Lisa had confided, that
while it was definitely fun, Lisa actually preferred other women. So the
two of them became best friends instead. The fact that Lisa had gotten
MORFS back in eighth grade, and become an extremely powerful bio-
elemental and shape shifter, hadn't hurt their relationship, despite some
stresses.
Malcolm had counted it extremely lucky when the General had assigned him
to this squad, because it meant that he was back in the San Francisco
area, and he could look Lisa up. They had gotten together a few times
since then, and had found that there was an even better reason for them
to have stayed friends. They had the same taste in women. A few strip
club trips later, and they were hanging out fairly regularly.
So the two of them chatted like the old friends they were, until they got
to the lobby, where they found an older gentleman, in an army general's
uniform, sitting by the door, waiting for them. He rose when he saw them,
and motioned for Malcolm to stay seated, as the injured man attempted to
rise to attention. "At ease solider. Don't want you aggravating that
injury." He nodded to Lisa, "Ma'am, I need to talk to my solider for a
moment. Could I have a minute of privacy in your car before the two of
you leave?"
Lisa stared at the general, correctly reading the rank insignia on his
uniform, and simply nodded. The general accompanied them out to Lisa's
car, and the general waited as the Lisa helped Malcolm into the
passenger's seat. Once that was done, Lisa opened the driver's door, and
motioned at the general. He nodded at her politely, and remarked, "This
should only take a minute or two, doctor, and then I'll be out of your
hair."
Lisa nodded politely, and then walked over to the entrance and leaned
against the wall. She took the keys with her.
The general got into the car, and closed the door. He looked over at
Sergeant Stark and ordered, "Report Sergeant."
Malcolm immediately began to tell the General everything that had
occurred up to this point. He summarized how his team had been ordered to
eliminate two confirmed MORFS terrorists in the Carmichael manor, who had
kidnapped the twin sons of the senator. When he asked to see the
intelligence reports he was given a one page document and the floor plan
of the manor. The document contained little information other then a
brief physical description of the terrorists, and the fact that they had
empathic, telepathic, or some other mind influencing abilities, and were
to be eliminated post haste.
Malcolm stated that he asked of the official intelligence report, and was
told that it was classified, and that he would have to make due with the
summary he was given at the briefing. He made an official complaint to
his immediate commanding officer, who rejected his request, and then
wrote up an official complaint voicing his distaste for the fact that he
was entering a mission with inadequate intelligence provided.
The squad then immediately deployed, and he was one of three observers on
the house for several hours. Mostly watching the two ?terrorists' pack up
several duffel bags and boxes with what appeared to be personal items and
clothing. Then the two of them changed into nightgowns, had a brief
conversation, and put the packed bags in the hall closet near the twins
bedrooms. They then went to those self same bedrooms, did a passable
evening routine, and want to bed. It took them some time to get to sleep.
He noted several disturbing facts in his watch. The two targets didn't
seem unfamiliar at all with the house, and seemed extraordinarily
comfortable in the twins rooms. There was no sign of the twins, nor were
there any signs of trouble or struggle in the house. He had come to the
personal conclusion that there was something wrong with the mission, but
when he mentioned that to his CO, he was told that the mission would
continue as normal, and to follow all orders.
He reluctantly led his men into the house, and sent half his men to deal
with the second twin while he was to execute the first. He retrieved his
sidearm, and very deliberately put a bullet right between her eyes. All
it did was wake her up. It didn't even bruise her. She promptly seized
his weapon hand, and yanked him down, sending him into the nightstand,
rendering him unconscious.
When he came to, he immediately realized that he had been disarmed, and
searched. They left his com gear on him, but it was off. When he opened
his eyes, he saw the two targets. They claimed to be the Carmichael
twins, and seemed rather annoyed at their father, seeming to blame him
for this. They decided to run, and began to leave immediately. The white
twin wrote a letter to some unnamed individual, while the black one
immediately began to carry the packaged belongings and objects out of the
house. They then left the estate, and he called for backup. An hour
later, the FBI arrived and along with them, the EMT's. He was
interrogated politely by the lead FBI agent, and then loaded into the
ambulance for dispatch and treatment. Malcolm closed his report.
The general sat back and looked at his solider. "Do you believe that the
targets were in fact the Carmichael twins?"
Malcolm nodded. "Yes sir, I do."
The general nodded. "I agree with your assessment. From what you told me,
and from what I know of the senator, I think I know what happened. I'll
begin an investigation of the mission immediately. I can think of at
least three men who will be in serious trouble before all this is done.
Now, my orders to you. One, your conclusions on the identity of these
poor kids has got to stay to yourself, or you'll suffer more severe
consequences than you can comprehend. Two, you are as of now on official
medical leave, indefinitely, until such a time as you are declared fit
for duty. Three, you will not be declared fit for duty until this matter
with the Carmichael twins is resolved. Understood solider?"
Malcolm nodded, and said, "Yes, sir. Perfectly, sir."
The general simply nodded, and got out of the car. He walked over to
Lisa, and nodded to her as he headed to his own automobile. "You take
care of my boy, doc."
Lisa nodded back, "Yes, sir."
Lisa got into her car and started it up. As she hummed out of the lot,
she asked her passenger, "What was that all about?"
"I needed to report on my last assignment," Malcolm replied. He looked
out at the road, "I'll fill you in later."
Lisa looked at him, and then considered what she had seen on the news
before she got that call from Agent Davies. She frowned, and focused on
the road again. "This is about the Carmichaels, isn't it?"
Malcolm bowed his head. "Yeah, that would be about right." He grimaced,
expecting an explosion.
Lisa snarled, and smacked the wheel. "Damn it, Mal, you know what I told
you about this kind of thing." She smacked the wheel again. "All right,
solider boy, what the hell is going on here."
Malcolm sighed in relief. She wasn't going to be too angry at him. "First
off," he began, "How much do you know about the Carmichaels?"
"Only that the senator's an ass."
"Right, then I should start at the beginning. The senator has two kids, a
pair of twin boys. Yesterday morning he supposedly received a call from
his manor, from a pair of MORFS terrorists, or so he claims. He
immediately reported it, and my team was sent in to eliminate them."
"All right, so since this is obviously not as cut and dry as all that,
what went wrong?"
"What I said before was fact. From this point on, it's all conjecture,"
he hedged, and at her imperious gesture, he continued. "When I arrived, I
began to observe the targets; I was struck by how at ease and familiar
with the surroundings they were. They didn't act like terrorists, even
ones with telepathy or some other mental control. They acted like a pair
of nervous kids getting ready to be thrown out of their house, to be
perfectly honest."
"Which, given some of my senator's speeches, I can understand, assuming
they were the twins."
"Yeah, well, I was a little leery of going after them, but the intell on
the mission was classified, and I didn't have anything concrete, so my
objections were overruled, based on the classified information."
"Which is a load of crock."
"Yes, but not one I could do anything about. So my team went in there,
and we got wiped out. I'm the only one left."
"Damn," Lisa whittled in appreciation. "Nasty kids."
"Yeah," Malcolm agreed, "I put a bullet between the eyes on one of them
while she was asleep from about two feet away, and it didn't even bruise
her."
"Her?"
"Yeah, both of the targets appeared to be monochromatic females. And the
twins were a pair of football jocks."
Lisa just whistled. "Sounds like a wicked power."
"That's what I thought. I have no idea how this got blown so way out of
proportion. But those kids seemed like decent people. And I go the same
read off of them that I got off of Mika in our junior year."
"The swap?"
"Yeah. They looked really female, but their body language read male.
Football jock male. So did their conversation, and the chat I had with
them after I woke up wasn't exactly stress free."
"You chatted?"
"Yeah, they waited around till I woke up, gave me an incredibly bad
interrogation, and then decided to scram."
"And your opinion?"
"They were the Carmichael twins. I have no idea how this happened."
"That's because you're too trusting of the system." Lisa's voice was
bitter with cynicism. "You haven't seen any really corrupt people in the
system laid bare."
"You mean that you think that it was deliberate?"
"I think that running like hell may be the best thing those two ever
did."
"What aren't you telling me?" Malcolm made it a statement, not a
question.
"There have been disappearances out of several public clinics recently.
I've seen the medical files. Severe MORFS cases have disappeared shortly
after their recovery. All in clinics receiving money from the federal
MORFS assistance act."
"And that has something to do with the Carmichael's how?"
"Not sure," Lisa shrugged, "but all the MORFS were extreme physical
modifications. They all turned up dead several months later. They had to
be identified by DNA matching. There wasn't enough of them left to make a
visual match."
Malcolm frowned. "Experimentation?"
"Torture, I think."
"Show me the files." Malcolm scowled. "But how does this connect to the
fact that my team was sent in early and unprepared?"
"It doesn't. But it may be one more thing the twins have to worry about.
That is the assumption you're operating on, right? That your targets were
really the Carmichael twins?"
"Yeah. And you're right. If someone is snatching up MORFS for
experimentation or something, and only powerful, extreme degree MORFS,
they definitely qualify."
"Right, well, lets get you inside, so I can start working on you," Lisa
said as they rolled up to her house.
Malcolm spotted a familiar looking car out on the street. "Lisa, did you
expect company?"
"No, why?"
"I saw that car at the Carmichael house, when the FBI got there. We have
visitors."
Lisa pulled into he driveway and the two of them got our and headed
around to the front of the house, where they found a rather familiar
green haired woman sitting on the stoop. It was agent Davies.
Malcolm raised an eyebrow at her. "Hello?"
She looked up from the collection of folders she had been fiddling with.
"I have a problem."
Lisa gave the FBI agent a very obvious once over, and then looked over at
Malcolm. "Mal?"
Malcolm looked at Lisa, then at agent Davies, and then looked up and down
the block. "Inside," he stated quietly. As Lisa walked past to unlock the
door he whispered, "If you still have it, that graduation gift I gave you
would be really welcome right now."
Lisa, to her credit, didn't react, but her hand was trembling as she
unlocked the door. The three of them quickly moved inside the house, and
Mal promptly crashed on the couch. With his good hand, he gestured for
them all to be quiet, and then motioned for agent Davies to sit. She did
so, and the two of them waited for Lisa to get back.
It took a few minutes, but Lisa eventually came back with a small white
object, that looked a lot like a walkman. She handed it to Malcolm, who
put it on the table and hit the button on the top. It let out a low
hissing noise, like static, and Malcolm smiled. "There we go, that should
let us talk without anyone nosing in on us." He sat back with a pleased
look on his face, and then took pity on the two of women. "White noise
generator. It makes boom and parabolic mikes freak out. I think that
someone is following you."
Agent Davies nodded, and looked glum. "Yeah, well, it gets worse. I've
been ordered off the Carmichael case. Misguided priorities."
Malcolm looked irritated, and leaned forward. "Ok, explain."
Davies looked like she was about to, but Lisa interrupted. "First, let me
get to work on Mal. We'll need him working if I'm any judge."
Davies nodded, and Malcolm leaned back. Lisa put her hands a few inches
above Malcolm's shoulder. "You can talk, I just need to concentrate, so
no raising your voice. And no moving." This last was directed at her
patient. "This should only take a few minutes."
Agent Davies nodded and started her explanation. "Right after you were
carried out, there was a detonation in Overlook Park. We already had
agents en-route, so I started going over the manor. It looks like the
twins had their own little apartment set up in there. Full kitchen and
everything. We found the bits that they used to make a bomb of some kind,
hardly high yield, but still. I had teams do a full sweep of the area,
and then we took everything to the mobile lab. I also told one of my
agents to track you down." She nodded at Lisa, and then continued. "The
interesting thing is, we found four sets of fingerprints. Two sets
belonged to the twins. The other two weren't in the system. The thing is
the unknown prints were mostly under the twins prints. We also got some
strange variants on the twins prints. The print was right, but the finger
shape was off."
Malcolm nodded. "Smaller and narrower?"
Davies smiled, "Almost. Longer and narrower. The finger was basically the
same size, just proportioned differently. Like it was long and slender
instead of broad and thick." She smiled at Malcolm.
Malcolm smiled, and Lisa spoke up, "So Mal was right, and the two women
he was after were really the Carmichael twins?"
"Yes, but this didn't prove it. So I did a DNA profile on a hair that I'm
fairly sure belonged to the targets, and hair that belonged to the
twins."
Malcolm interrupted, "How did you get the hair?"
"They had brushes in the bathroom. I wonder where those extra long white
and black hairs came from." She smirked again. "The twins base samples
were easy. We tossed their clothes. One nice pubic hair from each twin,
in their underwear. God bless slovenly teen boys. Well, long story short,
we checked, and they matched. And that's where I made my mistake. I
didn't log the hairs properly, just rushed the test through as a ?Genetic
Sample', and that screwed me. One time, just once, I skip procedure, and
it screws me." She shook her head. "Well, anyways, I pulled the LUDs on
their phones and their E-Coms, and got Lisa's number. I called Lisa while
I went over the LUDs, and was getting ready to reclassify this, when I
got a call from my supervision. One spirited conversation later and I was
off the case for, and I quote, ?following the victim, not the suspect.'
What a load of bull.
"So the official line on the incident this. The twins had a party a few
days ago. They turned off their father's security system to do so.
Apparently they did this often. During the festivities, the deranged Jet
and Quartz, who are now not malicious terrorists, but delusional
psychopaths with superpowers, snuck in, and once the partygoers were
dispersed, killed the twins. They then disposed of the bodies, and
attempted to assume the twins lives. They ordered new clothes on the
twins credit cards and paid a local boy to pick up and deliver the items
to them. The ?plan' began to unravel when their father called home to ask
how the party went, and the ?new' twins answered the phone. He
immediately called the task force in, and they sent a team to capture the
terrorists, and ascertain the location of the twins."
Malcolm and Lisa stared at agent Davies for a long moment, and then
Malcolm laughed. "And who exactly buys this?"
"Everyone. I screwed up the original DNA test, and the retest was made
against the DNA data on the twins in the security files of their father's
detail. It didn't match."
"What!" Malcolm exclaimed, jarring Lisa, and forcing her to shove him
back. "Sorry, sorry, what did you mean, they didn't match? That's
impossible."
"The only explanation I have is that the data in the detail's computers
was altered. Most likely before you even went in on your mission."
"Crap, had to be the father then. Proof?" Malcolm was incensed. He
couldn't believe that someone would try to set these kids up like this.
And there was only one suspect.
"The father. You remember the message the twins left? About their mother
and sister? The file was right where they said it would be. It makes
interesting reading. Apparently, several years back, the Carmichael
daughter contracted MORFS, and turned into a hybrid. Cat-girl, from the
photos in the file. The father flipped. Accused the wife of cheating on
him, rejected blood ties to the girl, divorced the wife, banished them
both, and did his level best to ruin them both for life. Did a decent job
of it, too."
Malcolm leaned back. "Why didn't the mother demand a paternity test? That
would have settled things, and given her a LOT of ammo for the divorce."
Davies looked irritated. "She did. Apparently the judge in question was a
friend of the senator, and ruled that since the child had contracted
MORFS and mutated in an obvious non-human direction, then that proved
deviation from a pure bloodline. He summarily granted the divorce."
Lisa gasped in outrage. "What the hell, why didn't she appeal?"
"Apparently the good senator convinced her that appeals would just be
more of the same, and since the senator wasn't letting her use any of his
wealth to fund it, she couldn't afford legal council on the matter. It
was dropped. The two of them went off into the sunset, never to be seen
again. By court order, under penalty of incarceration."
Malcolm snarled. "So this bastard just throws away a faithful wife
because it doesn't suit his image? He's nuts."
Lisa frowned. "But what if he really believes this."
"He doesn't." Malcolm voice was filled with certainty. "He blocked the
paternity test. If he really believed the whole ?purity of blood' shtick,
he wouldn't have blocked it. He knew his wife was faithful; he just
couldn't have a hybrid as a child. So he didn't. If anything, he's a
megalomaniac. And he got seven good men killed."
"Well, six and a half," Lisa jibed, "The major was an ass."
"True, but he didn't deserve to die," Malcolm responded. "He was just
following his orders, without sufficient evidence to overrule on ethical
grounds; he had to do what he did. This whole thing sucks."
Lisa sat back and nodded at him. "Yeah, but your bones are fixed. And it
gets better. You want me to tell her about the kids?"
Agent Davies looked up from the report on the ex-Mrs. Carmichael at that.
"Kids?"
Malcolm nodded at Lisa as he took off his shirt and began to unwrap his
bandages. Lisa sat back and began to talk. "About a year ago, I got
involved with the federal MORFS clinic program. I was going over the
records when I found something odd. At the site I was at, there were
three cases where the subject just vanished after their symptoms
subsided. I went looking for them, because all three were extreme
physical transformations. I found them, in the obituaries. When I
investigated, I found that they had vanished just like I thought, and
about a year later their bodies had turned up. They had been seriously
mutilated. I studied the autopsy reports, and the conclusion I came to
wasn't a good one
"Someone out there grabbed these kids out of the clinics and had been
experimenting on them. Serious, disturbing, Dr. Mengela type stuff.
That's what killed them, these twisted experiments. They had had implants
of some sort, signs of torture, and the bodies had all been opened up and
examined once already."
Lisa sighed, and looked vaguely ill. "That wasn't the end of it though. I
went online and looked through the records. There have been
disappearances nationwide, all out of the clinic program. Most of them
turn up dead about a year later. About a dozen are still unaccounted for.
All of them were extreme or improbable MORFS transformations, or had
demonstrated extreme levels of abilities. It looks like someone's trying
to build super-soldiers."
Malcolm looked at her. "You're sure?" Agent Davies stared at her in
disbelief.
Lisa nodded. "Yes. I don't have any proof, but the pattern is there, and
the damage shown in the autopsies is consistent. Someone is using the
MORFS clinics to go shopping for test subjects, and they aren't nice
people. And this Jet and Quartz are perfect candidates for his pattern."
Malcolm leaned back and sighed. "So we've got a four way race. It's us,
trying to catch them to help them, the rest of the feds trying to capture
them, the senator trying to kill them, and this bunch of unknowns trying
to snatch them for reasons unknown. Wonderful." He shook his head. Then
he sat up. "Agent, does that report give a last known location for their
mother?"
Agent Davies head snapped up. "Yes, one second." She scanned through the
file, flipping the pages, looking for the requested information. "Here we
go. She was in Chicago, at last report. Why, you think that's where the
twins are going?"
"Yeah," Malcolm replied, "think about it. They apparently found this out
about the same time they underwent MORFS. It would make sense, especially
since MORFS is what got their mother ostracized from them."
Lisa looked thoughtful. "Well, there is another thing. How did they
survive MORFS, especially such an extreme case, without at least minimal
medical care?"
Agent Davies looked thoughtful. "One second," she muttered, as she went
through her stack of folders. "Here we go; their E-Com records. This
would be, what, seven, eight days ago? That's when the security system
went down. Would make sense that they turned it off when they found out."
Malcolm nodded. "Right, so wha'dya got?"
The three of the hunched over the list. Agent Davies muttered to herself.
"Huh. Well, that's interesting. A few hours before the security system
was turned off, they made two calls. First to a Dr. Henry Higgins, and
then about an hour later, to one Diane Smith. I can't really approach
either of them, especially if I'm being watched. You guys?"
Malcolm looked at Lisa, and they nodded. "I'll take the doctor," Malcolm
spoke up.
"Then I'll find this Diane," chimed in Lisa.
"But first," interjected Malcolm, "lets see if we can't second guess
these two. Assuming they're trying to get to Chicago, how are they going
to manage it?"
"Drive?" Lisa suggested.
"No," Davies opined, "they blew their car up on Overlook Point. Likely to
prevent us from tracking it. They left their E-Coms behind for the same
reason. They're trying to go ghost on us. That means using unmonitored
transit. So they'll either steal a car or hitch a ride."
Lisa looked at the security photo's of the twins leaving the manor.
"Hitchhiking might be tricky given their appearance. They'll need to stay
out of sight."
Malcolm looked around. Then he noticed the model train sitting on the
mantle over Lisa's fireplace. "Trains. They'll hitch a ride in a cargo
container on a train. Up to Seattle, and then over to Chicago, using the
freight lines."
Agent Davies looked stunned. "Brilliant. It'll be almost impossible for
us to track them."
Malcolm shook his head. "Don't track them, track their computer. Quartz
had a tablet. She'll hack herself internet access. More then likely, she
hid a bunch of assets to live off of. We need to get up to Seattle, and
then we'll try to find them."
Agent Davies nodded. "I'll check in with a few friends on the team, and
then put in for some leave. I'll book us some tickets up to Seattle.
Amtrak."
Lisa laughed. "All right, let's get going. What time?"
Malcolm shrugged. "Swap numbers, we'll keep in touch. Let's go. We've got
work to do, and I need to get back to base for my things." He flexed his
formerly injured hand. "I want my bike back."
The three of them nodded, and they headed out. Malcolm observed that the
car he noticed down the block was still there. He hoped that the snoops
had gotten their earful of white noise. He knew they were being followed.
It was time to make some moves of his own, rather then react to other
people. Time to start playing this game.
An hour and a cab ride later, he was back on base, just outside of San
Francisco. He walked into the computer lab and looked at the technician
there, and smiled. "Specialist Franks, good to see you."
Thin, wiry and balding, David Franks was the resident techie, and used as
the research guy, both officially and unofficially, by almost everyone on
base. He was also the gossip king of the base. "Hey, Sergeant, I thought
you were out of action?"
Malcolm smiled. "I am. I got banged up, and put on indefinite leave. I
need some info from you."
Franks frowned. "Looking for a little revenge, Mal? That's not like you.
I feel bad about what happened, but..."
Malcolm scowled. "No, not revenge. Last night was FUBAR man. I promise,
when this is all over, I'll give you the entire write up, but till then,
I gotta keep it under wraps."
Franks sighed. "Right, so whadda ya need?"
Mal smiled at him. "Info. Doctor Henry Higgins, MD. Who is he, and where
does he live?"
Specialist Franks broke out into a broad grin. "Something small, eh? Give
me five minutes." The Specialist promptly pulled out a chair and plopped
down in front of his computer. "Scram, go get your gear, find me before
you leave, I'll have your data."
Malcolm saluted. "Thanks, Franks. I owe you a beer for this."
The Specialist just nodded. "Take me out clubbing with that lezzie friend
of yours some time; we'll hit up a tittie bar."
Malcolm just laughed, waved and headed back to his quarters. The first
order of business was to change his clothes and get clean. Ten minutes
later, he was dressed in a black T-shirt and black cargo pants. He
quickly began to pack his bags, including his personal weapons. He made
sure he had his sidearm, his knife, and his spare clips. He grabbed his
coat out of his closet, and headed down to the armory.
Once downstairs, he grabbed his less utilitarian weaponry. An MP5 and a
M82A1M. Old weapons, but effective. He took out several boxes of ammo for
each. The supply sergeant gave him an odd look, but he informed him that
he was on special assignment, and would have little time to re-supply. He
took the weapons back to his room, and stowed them in the concealment
carrier for his bike. It looked like a standard rifle case, and any
inspection would show a simple antique Winchester, disabled, inside. It
has a biometric lock, as befitted a carrying case for an antique, and was
very secure. It was his favorite souvenir off of any of the ops he had
been on.
He grabbed his duffel and the gun case, and headed down to the motor
pool. He checked out his bike, a newer Honda model that ran on the same
Bio-diesel derivative that the army and most trucks used. He would have
to fuel it at truck stops, but the thing wasn't quite as combustible as
the standard fuel cell auto or bike, and had a hell of a lot more punch
in the engine department. He strapped the luggage onto the bike, and
headed down to the computer lab.
Specialist Franks was waiting for him. "Mal, you've got problems."
Malcolm raised an eyebrow, and the Specialist continued. "Your doc's
dead."
Malcolm frowned. "Huh. That's irritating. How?"
"Car crash, on his way back from a house call or something. Salicia cops
have the case. You going to look into it?"
Malcolm shrugged. "Not sure. I've got a little R&R to catch up on," he
lied, "this'll keep."
Franks laughed. "Well, don't let it lie too long. The smell can get
terrible."
The two soldiers shared a laugh, and then Malcolm headed out. He was lost
in thought as he headed back to Salicia. This was unfortunate. He needed
to find out what happened to that doctor, and what he was doing when he
died. Hopefully Lisa was having better luck.
Lisa was standing outside of a modest house in what amounted to the poor
part of Salicia. That meant that the properties were valued at less then
two million dollars, so she supposed that poor was subjective in this
case. The house she was looking at was very nice, and what was better,
she could call it a house; unlike some of the miniature mansions she had
seen on the way over here.
This particular dwelling was modest, homey, and altogether lovely. She
wouldn't mind retiring to a place like this, one day. Then again, there
were a lot of things that she wouldn't mind that weren't going to happen.
She straitened her blouse, and got out of her car to meet the Smiths.
She wasn't wearing Lisa today. She had changed her clothes before she
left her house, and even more telling she had changed her face. She had
several faces, and while she identified herself as Lisa, and had even
defined a face for herself (an idealized version of herself, thank you
very much, her abilities to manipulate bodies wasn't going to be wasted),
she had set up a series of additional ?faces' that had names and
personalities of their own. She used them like garments, putting them on
and taking them off as easily as she would a dress. For this little
meeting, she had decided to wear Maggie.
Maggie was an elegant, shapely black woman in her early twenties.
Stunningly beautiful, with a white caduceus tattoo on the back of her
right hand, and ankle length ebony hair, she was a favorite of Lisa's for
a night on the town. She really did enjoy watching men hit on her and
seeing the expression when she turned them down, or frenched another
woman. It was an entertaining diversion. She wondered just what this
Diane looked like. It might be amusing to ask her out.
She shook her head as she walked up to the door. Head on the business.
Keep your mind out of the gutter. She shook her head and let her hair
fall down her back. Approaching the door, she rang the bell and stood up
straight. *All right Lisa, here we go* she thought to herself, as the
door opened.
The first thing that struck her was that the very pretty young woman who
opened the door was making her hot. The second was that she wasn't in her
real shape. The third was that this was Diane Smith.
"Hello?" Diane asked the strange black woman who had rung the bell. She
was confused as to who this was. She didn't look like a Jehovah 's
Witness or a saleslady.
Lisa shook herself mentally, and held out a hand to Diane. "Hi, I'm
Maggie. I'm looking for a Diane Smith, are you she?"
Diane nodded, suddenly nervous. "Yes... What's this about?"
"Can we talk inside?" Lisa wanted a little more privacy then standing on
the street. No telling who the neighbors were.
"I'd like to know what this is about first." Diane had her mental feet
under her, and wasn't having any.
"It's about a private matter, dear. I'd like to get inside where we can
take our masks off." Lisa played a bit of a risk with that, but she was
hoping to get this done quickly. Unfortunately this wasn't to be.
"Di, who is it?" A male voice called out from inside the house. A large,
well muscled man with big feathery wings walked up behind Diane. "And you
are?" he asked.
Lisa noted that he was quite handsome. Male beauty was a bit of an
abstract concept for her, but still, she could pick a few things up from
her colleagues. "I'm here to ask a few questions about the Carmichael
twins. I'd rather we had this conversation in private."
Diane and the winged youth exchanged a look. Diane spoke up first. "All
right, come on in. We'll talk." They both wore guarded expressions, and
Diane was being very defensive. They led her into very comfortable living
room, and they seated themselves on the couch. From the way they sat
together, Lisa deduced that they were lovers. Pity that. Lisa sat in an
easy chair that wasn't quite opposite them. She had decided to try to
minimize the adversarial tone this encounter had started on.
Once they were all seated, Diane spoke up. "So, Maggie, what do you want
to know about J, Sam and Dan?" She covered it quickly, but Lisa noticed
the slip. She decided not to call her on it.
"I want to know why the twins called you right after Doctor Higgins left,
and before they turned off the security system, and why you don't show up
on it."
The two teens exchanged a quick look, and the winged one spoke up. "I
don't know exactly what you're implying..." He trailed off at a look from
Lisa.
Lisa sighed. She hated this part. "Alright you two, here's the drill. I
know you know something. Exactly what it is, I don't know, but it's
there. Now, I'm not a fed, or a cop, or any kind of agent. I'm just a
girl doing her best to help some kids that look like they're in trouble."
The two kids on the couch traded looks again. Lisa sighed. "Here, I'll
relax for you." She concentrated for a moment, and shifted back into her
?normal' form.
The thing about shape shifting, as far as Lisa could tell, was that
anything you did was permanent, unless you decided to change it. At least
if you were as strong as she was. She could always tell when she wasn't
in her ?normal' shape, her skin felt like it was slightly too small, but
it took no real effort or concentration to maintain. To shift her form
away from her normal form, or just away from the form she was in, took
effort, and it took deliberate concentration to revert back. But staying
in any one form took no real effort, and once she had taken the time to
make a given shape one of her ?faces' the amount of effort it took to
shift lessened dramatically.
In her case, her ?normal' form wasn't the form she had been born in, it
was the improved model. In addition to being a shape shifter, she was
also a powerful Bio-Elemental. Sufficiently powerful, in fact, that she
didn't even age unless she wanted to. Physically, she hadn't allowed her
body to age since she had figured out how to stop it, and had even
repaired some of the damage age had started doing to her. That little
trick wasn't something she bruited about, as her ability to affect
similar effects on others was highly limited.
So in here case, she just relaxed a little, concentrating of looking
normal, and felt her body flow back into its normal shape. She opened her
eyes and looked at Diane. "Now then, why don't you just relax and look
normal, eh?"
Diane blanched, and looked at her lover. He shrugged at her, and she
sighed. She closed her eyes and her body flowed into the shape of a very
beautiful young woman with large breasts and pink hair. Lisa stared at
her dusky skin, captivated by the sudden tightness of her shirt. "How did
you know?" Diane asked. Her voice was the same.
Lisa sighed. "I'm a bio-elemental. A very strong one."
The boyfriend looked at her. "How strong."
She grinned. "Strong enough to know that you two are alone in this house
and that you were about to get, hmm, intimate before I interrupted. Which
is very distracting, by the way."
Diane smirked back. "Lusting after my boyfriend, Maggie?"
Lisa's grin widened. "No, dear, lusting after you." The two of them had
satisfactorily shocked expressions on their faces. "Now, while I have you
distracted," Lisa sailed on, "let me explain what I think happened here."
The two of them sat there and recovered, and waited for Lisa to go on.
She waited for a moment to ensure they were listening and then began. "I
think that the good doctor proclaimed the young Carmichael boys MORFS
positive, and issued scripts for the usual energy packs and sedatives.
It's interesting how the medical community treats MORFS like an
inconvenient cold these days. Nothing to worry about, except in odd
cases. But anyways, I figure that the twins asked you to go get their
prescriptions, and then turned off the security system so you could get
in and keep an eye on them during the change, am I right?"
The expression of shock on both of their faces told her that she was
correct, and the boyfriend's reaction told her that he was there as well.
Curiouser and curiouser. She fixed them both with what she hoped was a
firm stare. "Ok, I need you two to tell me what happened, all right?"
The two of them exchanged a look. Diane sighed and spoke up, "Right,
well, you're right, I suppose. A week back I got a call from Dan, saying
that they had just been diagnosed with MORFS and to come over and pick up
the prescription and fill it. Of course I did it. I've known the guys for
years, ever since I moved here, and I owed them. So I went and got them
the prescription and brought it back. I also brought Brian along," she
nodded at her boyfriend. "So when I got back, they said that they had
turned off the security, and showed me a file that Dan had found when he
used his father's computer to turn off the security system. Apparently,
he had forgotten to log off. The file was about their mother and
sister..." she trailed off.
Lisa interrupted, "I've seen the file."
Diane nodded, and Brian snarled, "So you know what that bastard did to
his daughter?"
Lisa just nodded, and motioned for Diane to continue. "Well, the guys
decided to just get it over with. I was keeping an eye on Sam, while
Brian made sure that nothing unfortunate happened to Dan. It was odd,
watching them change. Well, long story short, four days later Sam was a
jet black woman with wings. Great big rack too. I was jealous."
Diane looked mildly wistful, and Lisa just smirked. "If you want to, you
could give yourself a rack just like hers, you know."
Diane grinned. "I know, but that would be cheating. Anyways, me and Brian
did a few things to help them adapt." At Lisa's inquiring expression, she
explained, "I helped them with their wardrobe, and then I used a little
trick of mine to try to read their powers..."
Lisa looked up, abruptly fascinated. "And the results were?"
Diane looked chagrined. "Mixed. Jet had some kind of weird elemental
power. It was very narrow in scope, but strong as hell. She was also an
illusionist and a minor precognitive. Quartz was another elemental that
I've never seen before, as well as two others big ones that I think are
physical enhancements. That and getting into their heads hurt like hell.
If I wasn't piggybacking on my empathy, I don't think I would have gotten
in. Some kind of link between their minds that makes it impossible to
access their minds at anything deeper then a surface level. After it was
all over the two of us went home, and that was the end of it till I saw
that great big explosion up on the bluffs. So what happened up there?"
Lisa grinned. "Special forces were ordered to assassinate the twins.
Their father apparently thought that they were terrorists who had
kidnapped his sons. They put a bullet between Quartz's eyes." Lisa paused
while Diane and her boyfriend looked panicked. Then she smirked. "All it
did was annoy her. I don't know all the details, but all but one of the
soldiers who were on the team died, and the twins bailed. They took a
jeep up to Overlook Point, blew it up, and vanished. We think that
they're trying to get to Chicago to find their mother."
"And when you find them," Brian asked, "What then?"
"We try to clear them. There's a setup going down here, and I try to
flatten those when I run into them."
Diane looked troubled. "And the real feds? The army?"
"The feds think that they're a pair of delusional MORFS victims who, in
their delusion, think that they're the senator's sons, and have killed
the twins and are attempting to replace them. The DNA sample in the
senator's security file has been altered and it doesn't match the two of
them any more."
Diane looked shocked. "But we saw them change. We could prove that they
are who they are."
Lisa shook her head. "If you came forward, they would say that the
delusional twins have twisted your mind with telepathy or something. We
need physical confirmation, and we need the two of them in hand to
confirm your story. But if it gets out that you two can confirm the
story, then there are people out there who would be happy to kill you to
keep the senator's reputation intact. Keep your heads down."
Brian nodded. "That explains the packages." At Lisa's confused look, he
continued. "We got a package with most of their old thi