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Authors: Patrick E. McLean

BOOK: Hostile Takeover
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As they headed into town, Earl held his foot close to the floor. The old pickup wasn't worth much, but he didn't often get to test it when Momma was riding shotgun. She didn't much care for drivin' and certainly didn't like drivin' fast. Which was why it came as some surprise when she asked,

"Earl, does this vehicle go any faster?"

"Yes'm," Earl said softly.

"Then proceed."

The pickup rattled and wheezed and jolted something fierce on the dirt road. But Nancy didn't complain. Earl choked back a smile. But damn if she didn't look uncomfortable enough. Wedging herself one hand on the dash and another behind the bench seat—bracing with both legs. It was enough to make him want to find a few bumps. Not big ones, but bumps all the same.

"You okay, Momma? You want I should ease up a little?"

"You just drive, Earl," she managed to chatter out.

Earl'd have to give the boy a whuppin' for the mess he'd gotten himself into, but he was findin' a little enjoyment in it. He just hoped the boy hadn't done anything too stupid.

At first, Billy had run blindly, not caring where he went, only wishing he could run faster. But that wasn't the way his powers worked, at least not yet anyway. How had he knocked a hole through a brick wall? It was hard for him to feel anything other than fear as his legs and lungs pumped for all they were worth, but he did remember being angry.

He was so angry, he had done about the dumbest, most useless thing a person can do. He punched the wall. Then the wall wasn't there anymore. When he saw the street beyond, he started thinking about what they would say when they saw the wall. Then he panicked and made a run for it. He heard Wilkins screaming about him being a demon as he fled.

He was a good boy, generally, and being on the run from the law was very disconcerting to him. Normally, when he got himself in trouble, he'd take a switching and be done with it. He knew that wasn't going to happen this time.

When he stopped to drink from a spicket, it was the best water he had ever tasted. The first taste of true freedom was strong and intoxicating. How would they keep him, if they caught him? The jail didn't work. And that had to be the strongest wall this town had. Even though he didn't know how his strength worked, he bet shackles wouldn't be any good either. Oh, they'd have to listen to him. Oh, they'd listen to his side of it now.

Not knowing where else to go, he headed home. He imagined that his father, Earl, would be mad at him. His fault or not, he was going to get a switching, for sure. But that was just the problem. It wasn't his fault. But he was going to get blamed for it anyway. The thought of such injustice, about the worst injustice a sheltered boy from a good family could imagine, made him angry. And as his anger grew, so too, did his speed.

He was going so fast on the state highway that he almost missed the turnoff onto the dirt road that lead out to their lonely farm. As he got closer to home and the inevitable switching, he ran faster and faster. The corn on either side of the road became a uniform blur in the moonlight.

By the time saw the lights of the oncoming pickup, it was too late. The anger turned to fear and his powers went away. The laws of physics took over. An object in motion, he stayed in motion until he hit the truck.

The rushing sound stopped. Billy had the sensation of a giant hand pushing him backwards down the road for a distance. Furrows of dirt pushed up around his feet. He felt the hot fluid from the radiator on his leg and jumped backwards. When he looked into the compartment of the truck, he realized that it was empty. How could that be? There had to have been someone driving the truck.

Miraculously, one of the truck's headlamps was unbroken and still lit. When he looked behind him, its uncertain, dying light revealed a figure lying in the darkness. He went to it as if in a dream.

Her face had been badly damaged by the trip through the windshield and the unkind embrace of the country road, but he knew her by her hair and her blue dress. Then he realized what had happened. He hugged his mother to his chest. "Mom? Mom. Mom?" He started crying for help. At first for his mother—and then, when he realized that she was dead—he called for help for himself. Screaming for help as only a man who fears he has damned himself can.

The lone headlight dimmed and went out.

The next day, they found him in the road, clutching the corpses of his parents. He would say nothing but otherwise was a docile as a lamb. Even though there was nothing outwardly wrong with him, they had taken him to the hospital. He was placed in a clean white room. Doctors tried to understand what they were faced with, but they had little or nothing to go on. They could take no blood: needles broke on his skin. They could hear his heart beating, feel the pressure of the blood in his veins, but in every other way he was impervious to their art.

Billy could only remember fragments of those long, blank, white days in the hospital. The muttering of doctors, the murmuring of nurses, white curtains blowing in the wind. And then there was Gus. A man who was strong and confident in all the ways that Billy was not. Gus had been bred in honor and forged in war. So he could see what all the doctors had missed. That thousand-yard stare.

Billy had look of a man who had done horrible things and thought there was no way back. But Gus knew the way back.

With no introduction or preamble, Gus said, "You think that's the end of it?"

"Yeah," said Billy. It was the first time he had spoken in three months.

"If you want it to be. But there's another way."

"What?" said Billy, still lost within himself.

"You can't bring them back. But you can save others."

And that had started the job. It had become Billy's job to save everyone, everywhere, all the time. Years and years of going where they told him, when they told him. No life left over for himself. While he was doing it, he had always thought that it was penance. That it was just the way things had to be if he was ever to atone for what he had done.

But now that he had stopped, now that being trapped below the ground had forced him to take time to think about it, he realized that if he wasn't forgiven by now, he never would be. And maybe there was no forgiveness. Maybe things just were. Maybe all he had ever been was a fancy kind of slave.

In the present day, deep under the earth, Excelsior-who-had-been-Billy felt movement against his skin. How strange to feel again and to hear. There was a sound, and it was growing louder. It was a sound that he should have had a word for, but it had been so long since he had used words and heard sounds.

He was so tired. He could remember the word “tired.” The bare flicker of what remained of his consciousness was steeped in tired. But the sound grew louder and louder. It was rhythmic and urgent and undeniable. Sound sound sound sound sound sound sound sound sound.

No, faster than that. Suh-suh-suh-suh-suh-suh-sound. Why couldn't he remember what it was called? It was a, uh… Again he felt the earth shift around his skin. It distracted him. Then the tired came over him again in a wave. He wished the sound would go away, but it was coming closer and closer. Relentlessly on. Sharper and louder and drilling right into his brain.

When the bit of the jackhammer hit his skull and shattered, he remembered what it was called.

"I've got something!" cried a voice.

"Lower me down!" commanded another voice, ragged and hoarse. There was coughing, and the sound of debris falling into a pit. Excelsior felt the rock lift away from his face. He felt fingers brushing dust and concrete from his hair and skin. He opened his eyes for the first time in three years. He could see nothing. He blinked and struggled to clear his vision.

"Billy," he heard Gus yell, from far, far away. "Billy! Come back to me!”

Gus leaned back and yelled up to the top of the hole, "I need water!" Gus flopped out of his wheelchair to lie in the pit next to Excelsior. He cleared off more of Excelsior's face, revealing the husk of the once mighty hero. If Gus hadn't seen him move, he would have sworn that the hero was dead.

A lone beam of light fought its way through the dust and the sweat and the pneumatic hoses to rest on Excelsior's gaunt face like a gift of grace. With the sunlight, power flooded back into his limbs. His eyes cleared and he knew his strength to be his own again. He coughed pulverized concrete free from his lungs and sucked in fresh air. As his lungs expanded, the excavation shifted wildly and Gus struggled not to lose his footing.

"You back? You back, boy?" Gus said, with the excitement that can only come to an old man at the end of a long, seemingly hopeless struggle.

Excelsior tried to speak, but all that came out was a wheezing rasp.

"Easy, easy, you've been down here for a while." He leaned back again and more sunlight flooded into Excelsior. "Goddamn it, I said give me some water. Throw it. THROW IT!"

Water was poured onto Excelsior's dry lips and he drank of it greedily. He swallowed. He cleared his throat and then said one word.

"Windsor."

The ground exploded and Excelsior vaulted into the air. There was a rush of wind and he was gone on his mission of revenge. Revenge for being imprisoned. Revenge for the confusion of his life. Revenge, ultimately, for being born.

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

By the seventh hole, the knots in Edwin's shoulders had let go. He was striking drives with high, soaring confidence. The elegance of his game was pouring through every shot.

Winter and the demands of a growing company had kept Edwin from the game he loved, but when he was invited to come south to play golf on one of the finest courses in the country, he had not been able to resist. It also hadn’t hurt that he would be playing with Paul Facto.

Facto was one of the unknown, powerful men of the world. He sat on the boards of 23 of the Fortune 100 companies. He was also a perfectly mediocre golfer. But he knew his mark, and wanted Edwin to be in a good mood when he made his offer.

Over the last six holes, Facto had been evaluating Edwin's character. As inconvenient as Omdemnity Insurance was, Facto couldn’t help but admire Edwin Windsor. He had talent. He showed restraint. He understood business. But the question was, could he be co-opted? Facto believed so. This was good, because Facto wasn't sure that there was another option.

Of course, they could have had him killed. But in addition to being in bad taste, there were other, unknown dangers. Edwin controlled a force of incredible destruction. They did not know how he controlled it, but you do not have to understand how an atomic bomb works to know that assassinating the leader of a country that has one is a very risky move.

What intimidated Facto most of all was that Edwin hadn't brought a security team. In the world in which Facto lived, security teams were a necessary and everyday accessory. In fact, Facto had brought four bodyguards with him for this round of golf. They kept a respectful and polite distance, of course, but still, they were there. Did Edwin have a superpowered person watching over him? Was he suicidal? Did he have no fear? The fact that he had to ask these questions was disconcerting. But Facto believed that Edwin was a man who left nothing to chance. And so he proceeded.

"So Windsor," Facto said as Edwin walked onto the tee, "I'd like you to be on the board of Amalgamated Chemical."

This was a substantial offer. But Edwin was nonplussed. In fact, he did not even stop his pre-swing routine. He said, "I accept."

Again, Facto was rattled. He was not accustomed to the sensation.

"And the board of United Petroleum." By market capitalization, UP was one of the biggest companies in the world. That should surely get his attention, thought Facto.

Edwin did not check the motion of his swing. The compression of the ball against the face of the club sounded like an explosion. Edwin finished his turn and said, "I accept." Facto watched Edwin's shot bounce once and roll to a stop in the middle of the fairway.

"You've won," said Facto. His statement had little or nothing to do with the golf match, even though Edwin was well on his way to winning that as well. What he meant was that Edwin had broken the collective will of the corporate oligarchy. He had made it into the club. It was simply better business to give him an interest in companies that he might otherwise damage with his scheme of extortion and destruction.

Edwin did not snort derisively. He was not the kind of man who snorted. But it had been obvious to Edwin for many months that he had won. He had found it tiresome to bother with the actual destruction of factories at all. But then, Edwin was accustomed to being several steps ahead of those around him. He had grown used to the burden. And also the burden of winning gracefully. "I'll give you a stroke a hole from here on in, just to keep it interesting," Edwin offered magnanimously, politely pretending that Facto had been talking about golf.

As they got into the golf cart, Facto opened his mouth to accept the offer. But before he could agree, the tee box erupted in a superheated inferno of molten grass.

"JESUS CHRIST!" screamed Facto as he gave the cart all it was worth, which, of course, wasn't very much.

As they cut across the golf course, Facto shrieked at his security team, "Shoot it! SHOOT IT!"

A sheet of fire erupted to block their path. Facto swerved to avoid it and skidded to a stop underneath a small stand of trees.

As Edwin looked back, he saw a blur attach itself to one cart full of security personnel and throw it high into the sky. Edwin yelled, "Stand down," at a remaining member of Facto's security team who was firing an automatic weapon into the air indiscriminately.

"No, no!" cried Facto, "Shoot him! Shoot him!"

Edwin shook his head. Even in the face of certain and utter destruction, mankind was an animal that clung to false hopes and delusions. This was not a problem that bullets could solve.

"WINDSOR!" The cry boomed across the golf course. Even before hearing the voice, Edwin had known who it was. Every plan, no matter how carefully executed, has its downside risks. In Edwin's great scheme, this had always been his.

Edwin heard the inclement weather horn sound back at the clubhouse. How fitting, he thought, how Ancient and Honorable. Edwin would regret leaving great works unfinished, but most of all he would miss this game. Its uncompromising standard, its plain sensibility in a world gone mad. As Facto fled, Edwin stepped out on the surface of a nearby green and composed himself. He would face his fate.

Excelsior came down at an impossible speed. His booted feet slammed knee deep into the surface of the carefully manicured green.

This gave Edwin hope. Scant hope, of course, but if Excelsior had wanted him dead, he would have killed him already. This theatricality was something else entirely. Besides, as Excelsior stood knee-deep in the earth, he didn't look as powerful as he might. His skin was an unhealthy shade of whitish green, bits of concrete clung to his costume and hair, and, unless Edwin was mistaken, there appeared to be mold growing on the sweatier parts of his costume. Edwin smoothed his shirt and stood to his full height.

"Windsor!" Excelsior began, but then he realized the absurdity of his position, and he broke his feet free from the earth.

Edwin took this opening, "You have just killed several innocent men and destroyed the life's work of a truly masterful greenskeeper. Am I next?"

"Innocent? INNOCENT? They worked for you. They can't be innocent."

"No, in fact, they worked for Mr. Facto. I have no security team."

"Who the hell is Facto?"

"The man who undoubtedly soiled himself and his golf cart as he fled back to the clubhouse."

At a loss for the moment, Excelsior tried an old standard, "Windsor, FACE ME!"

It was too stupid for Edwin to dignify with a response. He just stared.

Excelsior tried to appear strong, but on the inside he felt unimaginably weak and confused. He had been so long underground. And now he had all these thoughts and feelings that he didn't know what to do with. He realized that there was no way—that there were no words—to give his inarticulate rage expression. A great wave of emotion overcame him again. For some reason, he thought of that long-lost bicycle, the Schwinn Excelsior. The bike he could never have because he no longer had a childhood left with which to ride it.

He couldn't help himself. Tears poured down his face.

"What is it that you want?" asked Edwin.

"I want revenge."

"I'm not in that business," said Edwin.

"Yes, you are. I want to be Evil."

"Ah," said Edwin, considering the possibility, "that is something else entirely."

Imagine you are not from around here. And by not from around here, I mean not from this quadrant of the galaxy. You've had no experience with the flora or fauna of Earth. And you are magically (or scientifically) transported to the middle of the desert in Arizona. You are immediately struck with the beauty of the place. The colors of the sunset, the sand, the strangely beautiful creatures that survive in this difficult ecosystem. Maybe you are a Martian and it reminds you of your now-dead home world. For whatever reason, the landscape touches you deeply.

Most of all you are moved by the delicate flowers that are put forth by the many cacti that surround you. Even though you don't really know about cacti, or flowers or deserts.

As you are drawn to one particularly beautiful white flower, you hear a noise. It's a strange sort of rattling noise that increases in intensity as you continue to move towards the flower "Ah,” you think, “this must be that ‘music’ stuff the Voyager satellite kept blasting at us." And because you are most certainly not from around here, the sound fails to create a sense of alarm.

In fact, your slender green body begins jerking in a non-rhythmic and strangely awkward fashion you believe to be ‘dancing. (Because if there is one thing that fringe research, government experiments and Hollywood have shown us, alien life forms have no funk whatsoever.)

That's when the rattlesnake bites you.

Now, if this were a story about an awkward alien come down to earth, this would be the moment where some capable, stoic and completely human son of the desert would happen along, apply a tourniquet, and save your ignorant alien ass. Then would begin a series of hilarious complications that would bring the two of you closer and closer together in an unlikely series of buddy-movie twists that would leave you both forever changed.

This is not that story. So if you are still identifying with the awkward, fish-out-of-water alien then I am sorry because you are now dead. But you have not died in vain. Your death is about to be used to make a point.

The point is this: if you don't know any better, you don't feel the appropriate level of fear when a rattlesnake rattles. Or when Edwin Windsor offers you a contract. But you and I, we do know. We know what it means when Edwin presents you with a contract making him your “agent for all matters personal and business, plenipotentiary, and without limit.” Just like we know that snakes are deadly.

Excelsior signed the contract, and totally missed the rattling noise. As he slid the contract back across the desk to Edwin, he said, "But what am I going to do?"

"Why, whatever our clients ask," Edwin said.

"But..."

"But what?"

"What if they want to pay me to kill someone?"

"Then I would say that is a very unlucky person. But fear not, I find that assassination is the crudest of methods. And you, despite how you have been used before, are not a blunt instrument."

"What?"

"To put it more simply," (and, as he said it, Edwin realized that putting it as simply as possible was going to be a good operating principle with this man) "You are going to be far too expensive to waste on mere assassination."

"Good, 'cause I don't think I want to kill anybody."

Edwin said, "That sounds like a hero talking. That sounds like the kind of a man whose strings are being pulled by someone else." Excelsior looked away uncomfortably. "Don't worry, that feeling will pass."

"What if I don't want it to pass?"

"You told me that you wanted to be your own man. You told me that you wanted to be in the driver's seat. That you didn't want to be at someone else's beck and call."

"Yeah, that's true."

"Well, make up your own mind, then," Edwin said with impatience. "I have no will in this matter. I am merely your agent. You asked me to help you be Evil. My kind of Evil. Ruthless, efficient, profitable. If you do not want to be these things, there is no need for you to take my advice. Tell me now and we will call the whole thing off."

"No, no," said Excelsior, "I do want to be Evil. But don't I get a nemesis or something? Like an arch-enemy?"

"That sounds rather pointless to me," said Edwin.

"But that's the way it's done. That's what Supervillains always did to me."

"Yes, I know. And how did that work out for them?"

"Well, it worked out great for me."

"Yes, I understand that, but how did it work out for them, Excelsior? How did it work for them?"

"Well, I'd generally beat them up and then hand them over to Gus. And he'd put them in a prison somewhere."

"And does that sound like a very profitable turn of events to you?"

"Well, no, but I like I told you, I don't know anything about money."

"And this prison? Have you ever seen it?"

"What are you talking about?"

"Well, if it took someone with your powers to subdue these people, what prison do you think could contain them?"

"Uh… I… y'know?" Excelsior said with genuine Midwestern Innocence "I don't know."

"Ah, bliss," said Edwin as a shrug rippled through his well-tailored suit.

"Bliss?"

"Ignorance is... never mind. There is a place far from here. North of Las Vegas. In and around the Nevada Test Site, there are a number of secure facilities where above-ground tests of atomic weapons were performed in the 50's. Since the advent of people with, let us diplomatically say, much-greater-than-average abilities—like yourself—these facilities have gained in importance. To understand why, you must understand radiation. Do you understand radiation?"

"Uh, yeah, I..." Excelsior's eyes glazed over. He remembered getting a lecture sometime in 1960 or so from some scared-looking guys in lab coats about radiation. They had talked and talked and talked. In the end Gus had helped him understand. This was a young Gus, still strong and with a full head of hair, a chin like a piece of granite and a walk like he'd never been scared of anything in his life.

Gus had told him, "Son, ya ain't invulnerable. Ya gotta stay away from the radiation. These eggheads aren't sure what it might do to you and all them… unstable elements ya got running through your bloodstream or whatever." Then Gus had lit a cigarette and leaned in and said, "They also keep telling me cigarettes can kill ya." He had blown smoke right towards the delicate-looking men in the lab coats. "But then, they don't know their raggedy asses from a raggedy hole in the ground, do they?"

Back in the present day, Excelsior said, "Uh, radiation is bad?"

"Radiation is bad. And hidden deep in these pockets of radiation is a hole in the Earth. This where the people you defeated were taken. They were placed in a lead-lined room in a cavern deep below the earth. They were questioned. Then the questioners left. Then the lead shields were raised and, superpowers or not, they were left to be torn apart by the radiation."

Edwin shifted in his chair and waved a professorial hand. "You see, against large enemies, those that can be bashed and broken and thrown into the sky—opponents with whom you can exchange banter and develop a perverse and unproductive relationship—you are nigh undefeatable. But against the small and the secret enemies, say a virus, or gamma rays—the inexorable march of time, the heartbreak of choice—against these things even the most powerful man can be defenseless."

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