New Olympus Saga (Book 1): Armageddon Girl (33 page)

BOOK: New Olympus Saga (Book 1): Armageddon Girl
8.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

The Invincible Man

 

Dreamland/Somewhere Over the Eastern Seaboard, March 14, 2013

John looked at Linda and smiled.

“Again? You’re insatiable, you know,”
Linda said, but her grin matched his. Two years of marriage later, and it still
felt like they were on their honeymoon, whenever they could find the time to be
together. They were both incredibly busy, but they always made the most of the
time they spent with each other.

“Try and break me, big boy,” she said
playfully, an old joke that still made him chuckle as he took her in his arms.
Their first night, she had wondered out loud whether she would survive the
experience. Discovering John’s ability to turn off his inhuman strength at will
had come as a relief to her. “I was worried this was going to turn into a
tragedy – Titanium Man versus Paper Woman,” she’d said, painting an image that
had made him shudder at the time.

As always, he was exquisitely aware of
everything about her, from the warm flush on her face and neck as he entered
her to the rhythm of her breathing, the racing heartbeat that his thrusting
motion matched, the crescendo their bodies built together. Her first orgasm was
a brief eruption; he changed his rhythm to match her body’s reaction. Her
delighted moans were music to his ears. He was home. Peace and joy enveloped
him.

“Holy mother of crap!”

John rolled off the bed and landed in a
fighting crouch. A young woman dressed in an outlandish leather costume was
standing in their bedroom, gaping at… well, at him. “Oh, my,” she said, her
eyes wide.

“What the hell?” he yelled, his erection
pointing at her like a gun.

“Should I shoot her, darling?” Linda said
steadily, pointing an actual gun at the intruder. She’d reached into the
nightstand and grabbed her .15 auto pistol, a Doc Slaughter design that fired
several types of ammunition. Linda looked mad enough to spit, and John was
pretty sure she wasn’t planning to use the non-lethal rounds in the gun. John’s
first impulse was to attack, but the intruder was not making any aggressive
moves, so he held off for now. He shook his head at Linda, who held her fire
for the time being.

“What are you doing here?” John said. He
belatedly covered himself with a pillow.

“Oh, God. I’m so sorry, but I’ve got some
really bad news, and now I know why you were so happy, but... But, it’s not
real. None of this is real!”

“What is she talking about?” Linda said.

“Damfino. What do you mean, not real?”
Even as he asked the question, John felt a sinking sensation deep in his gut.
Wrenching horror gripped him; it felt as if a man expecting to celebrate his
wedding had stumbled into a wake for his dead fiancé.

“He’s mind-controlling you, Laughing Mask
Man is; he’s a, uh, a puppet master, a mind frakker. And he’s right behind me,
so you’ve got to snap out of it. Sorry. I know this was the worst possible
moment, and I’m sorry, but I had to find you and tell you, because right now
you’re kidnapping me, my real body, your real body is kidnapping my real body,
and if you don’t wake up we’re all in deep crap.”

“You’re out of your ever-loving mind,
whoever you are!” Linda snapped. She looked like Linda, sounded just like
Linda, but… John blinked. Suddenly he could see right through his wife as she
became ghost-like and translucent. Shock washed over him. He blinked again and
the woman on the bed was a skeletal scarecrow with a bare hint of the features
of the woman he loved, dying alone and afraid. He remembered, and felt his
heart break all over again.

“No.”

“You little bitch!” said a man in a
theater mask and clothes that had gone out of fashion when John first arrived
to New York City. John hadn’t seen him enter the room, but there he was. He
slapped the woman in leather and sent her flying through a wall.

John recognized him immediately. They’d
only worked together a handful of times. The masked man had been one of the
early mystery men. He’d been featured in the pulps and had a short-lived comic
book. John had never liked or trusted him much, not least because he was a
master of illusion and misdirection, abilities that always struck John as
dishonorable, no matter to what ends they were used.

The Dreamer.

“Back to sleep, you imbecile,” the
Dreamer commanded. John started to move –

John was back in bed with Linda. “Again?
You are insatiable, you know.” Linda smiled and kissed him deeply and
passionately as he held her in his arms. He was home. He was happy. She gasped
as he entered her…

“OMG, do guys ever stop thinking with
their dicks? Wake up!” the girl’s voice cut through his happy daze like an icy
knife.

Linda was gone. Linda was dead, long
dead. He felt his heart break all over again.

Linda vanished, leaving only the girl and
the Dreamer. The Dreamer had overpowered the girl and was trying to strangle
her.

“Healz, please…” she choked out.

“Shut up! Shut up! Shut the hell up!” the
Dreamer shouted, smashing her head against the floor over and over. He seemed
to have forgotten about John.

The punch should have been immediately
fatal. John did not restrain himself. He gathered all the fury and sorrow that
were flooding back into his soul and released it into one blow. The Dreamer’s
head snapped back and he was knocked off the girl. That was all.

No, not all. The blow had knocked away
his mask. The Dreamer’s identity had remained a secret throughout the decades.
He had disappeared in the Seventies, dead or retired, nobody knew. Until now.

“Doctor Cohen,” John snarled.

“The name’s Muller. Dietrich Muller,” the
Dreamer spat back. “The
Juden
doctor was just another mask. The real
Cohen has been dead for a while. Pity, isn‘t it?”

“I am going to kill you now,” John said
in strangely calm voice.

“I don’t think you can,” the girl said,
getting up. Her wounds were gone, and she looked grimly determined. “We’re in
Dreamland and nothing lasts very long in here, even death.”

“I’m putting you back to sleep, boy,” the
Dreamer said, a savage grin in his face. “And then that little bitch and I are
going to spend some quality time together. There is some incipient trauma in
her mind that is going to be a pleasure to explore.”

“We can’t kill him,” the girl said. “But
if we beat the crap out of him enough, we’ll kick him out of your head.”

The Dreamer’s grin wavered. He looked at
John and concentrated, but nothing happened. “
Was ist das?

“That’s me, stopping your mind-frakking
crap,” the girl replied. “Time for some tank and spank.” She charged the
Dreamer.

John reached him first. Being able to
hammer someone with all his strength filled John with savage elation. For a
while he was able to wash away his grief in blood.

The Dreamer tried to fight back, but it
wasn’t much of a fight. The girl kept stabbing him in the back, and if he tried
to turn towards her John smashed him down. It wasn’t much of a fight, and it
didn’t last long. The Dreamer seemed to deflate and he faded away.

“Pwned you! Can’t wait to do it for real
next time,” the girl said.

“Ditto,” John agreed. “We were never
properly introduced, by the way. I’m John.” He offered her his hand. Now that
he had time to actually look at her, he realized her eyes and hair color were
almost identical to Linda’s. The realization brought another pang of sorrow,
but it was somewhat muted now.

The girl shook John’s hand tentatively.
“Christine. Nice to meet you.”

“Nice to meet you, Christine. Ah, do you
know how we get out of here?”

She furrowed her brow in concentration
for a few seconds. “I think… Like this.” She snapped her fingers.

John found himself floating in mid-air,
holding Christine with one arm. She was dressed in regular clothes, looking
much the worse for wear. He shifted his grip on her so they were facing each
other. Their eyes met.

“Hi,” he said.

“Hi,” she replied, smiling at him; she
was flushing. John smiled back. She was beautiful.

“Let her go,” someone said in an inhuman
voice that echoed with strange whispers.

John turned towards the sound. The Lurker
stood in the air facing him, floating and surrounded by an aura of dark energy.

“Another creepy guy in a mask?” Christine
said. “How many of them are there?”

“Wait. I know him,” John said, but even
as he tried to reassure her, he wondered. He’d known the Dreamer, too. And who
had sent John right into the Dreamer’s trap? Kenneth Slaughter. His best
friend. He couldn’t trust anybody.

“Let her go, Invincible Man, or I will
show you things,” the Lurker said, and tittered. “Things you won’t like.”

“What do you want with me?” Christine
shouted at the Lurker.

In lieu of an answer, the mystery man
removed his gas mask.

Christine’s face froze.

“Dad?”

 

 

Chapter Eighteen

 

Hunters and Hunted

 

New York City, New York, March 14, 2013

Cassandra was dying.

For decades, paranoids everywhere had
feared the day when Neolympians with the power to control and manipulate the
minds of others would take over the world. Some of them claimed that day had
already happened, and people did not realize it. The truth was that mind to
mind communication of any kind was a two-way street. To control or even affect
another mind, you had to become intimately linked to it. The targets’ memories
and emotions touched the controller. Their pain became the controller’s pain.
Telepathy begat empathy. The effect was magnified by the number of minds
affected. The psychic trauma caused by trying to affect too many people was
prohibitive. No Neolympian could control more than a few minds at once, and
even that would bear a terrible price.

Below Cassandra, eleven men and one woman
died time after time, as she forced their neural pathways to experience
alternate realities. She experienced each death in turn. Thought was becoming
reality, and she was bleeding from multiple spontaneous wounds, far beyond what
her limited healing abilities could handle. Soon they would overwhelm her and
she would fall.

It was worth it. She had held the hunters
at bay for crucial hours, time for Marco and his friends to do what was
necessary.

* * *

Archangel crawled up the stairs. They
kept disappearing, replaced with scenes from his past. He knew they were there,
however, and he forced his body to move even as he died yet again.

The amulet he wore under his neck had
finally started working, muting the effect of the visions. Each new death felt
less real than the last. Horror had been supplanted with rage. Only one thing mattered:
to find his tormentor and destroy her. Archangel had sensed her presence
through the kaleidoscope of death. A woman, a little Gypsy witch, was
responsible for this. He would make her pay. He would make her scream.

Another step. Another death, this one
wholly impersonal: a young woman with hard eyes and a bruised face going to a
doctor to take care of her little problem. It took him a while before
recognizing the young woman as his mother. Archangel spat blood and ignored the
psychic feedback tearing his body apart. He would heal or he would die, but he
would keep climbing for as long as he lived. He grinned, revealing red-stained
teeth.

Almost there.

* * *

The dance of possibilities was coming to
an end. Two alternatives remained. The man called Archangel would reach her and
kill her, or she would die of her wounds before he did.

It had been a good life, a worthy life.
She had enjoyed some of it immensely, and left the world a better place than
she had found. What more could be asked of anybody?

There was one last thing she wanted to
do. She gathered her nearly depleted reserves even as the Russian staggered
towards her, and sent forth the last of her will and power. A last message for
Marco.

Cassandra said her goodbyes, and let go.

 

* * *

“No!”

The roar of denial was useless, futile.
He had been mere steps from her, savoring what he would do to her. He could
almost taste it. The torn burning flesh, the screaming and pleas for mercy.
They all begged in the end, if they had enough breath left. He had begged and
pleaded a hundred times during his climb up the stairs, and now it was her
turn. He wanted, no, he
needed
to hear her scream.

He held the slight, lifeless body in an
almost tender grasp. The Gypsy bitch had sighed and died seconds before he
reached her. She had died peacefully like an old
babushka
at the end of
a long life. She was covered in wounds, should have perished in agony, but her
face told a different tale. She had been smiling at the end. Had felt no pain
at all. Had not revealed any information. Had
fucked
with him like no
one ever had.

He tore apart her corpse with his bare
hands, not even bothering to call forth his divine fire. Useless. The bleeding
carcass could not feel anything. He could never make her pay.

“Did you love anyone, bitch?” he
whispered to the severed head in his hands. “The faceless man, did you care for
him? He will pay for what you did, him and everyone you ever loved. You owe me
a thousand deaths. I will collect every single one.”

Useless. She could not hear him. He
carelessly tossed the head aside and went back downstairs. He would do all the
things he had promised her corpse, for he was a man of his word, but they would
provide him little satisfaction.

Nichevo.

He found Medved kneeling over Lady Shi.
The Bear’s breath came out in shuddering spasms. Tears were still running down
his face. Lady Shi was lying so perfectly still that Archangel thought she was
dead, but just as he reached the landing, she opened her eyes.

Lady Shi giggled like a schoolgirl.
Giggled and did not stop. The giggles became savage laughter, not sane in any
respect. Medved held her tightly and continued to sob while she laughed.

They would recover, or not; at the
moment, he could care less. Archangel walked past them and gave them their
privacy. He checked the time. They had been trapped with the witch for hours.
Where were his men? Where were those useless pieces of shit?

Nine of them were scattered around the
building’s lobby. Eight of them were dead. Six of those bore a myriad phantom
wounds. The other two had killed themselves, one by the simple expedient of
bashing his head against the wall until his skull had cracked open, the other
by disemboweling himself with his bare hands, something Archangel had not
thought was humanly possible. The ninth one was kneeling down, breathing
shallowly, his eyes glazed over. Useless. Archangel casually broke his neck and
put him out of his misery.

He found the last three survivors
standing by the cars outside with their thumbs almost literally up their asses.
It was only by the Devil’s luck that the police had not shown up to find out
why exactly three expensive cars were parked outside an abandoned building in
this neighborhood. His first impulse was to take out some of his frustration on
the cowardly assholes who had decided to wait and see, but their losses had
been heavy enough as it was. Anger was counterproductive. He had already lost
his temper over the Gypsy bitch, and that had been one time too many. Instead
of going into a murderous rage he walked up to them as if nothing had happened.

Nothing, after all, had happened. He’d
seen phantoms that had never been, and endured some psychic feedback. He’d
lived through worse. He’d inflicted worse. If he told himself those words
enough times, one day he might come to believe them.

“Report,” he said curtly.

“Nobody left the building until you did,”
replied one of them, trying desperately to be helpful. He failed miserably, of
course, but he did not know his life had already been spared. Let him keep
trying.

“Anything else?”

“Nothing here. Vladimir in Chicago wanted
to speak with you. I said you weren’t available.”

Archangel shrugged. That had been true enough.
He checked his wrist-comm – his very secure, signal-encrypted wrist-comm – and
saw he had two voice mails from the ex-KGB man, his point man in the operation
to capture or kill the Lurker. They were juggling too many balls at once. The
operation in New York to recover the lost subject, and the Chicago mission;
those were the two he was overseeing directly. He knew of at least two more
operations in different parts of the world, and suspected of at least one or
two more. Not all of them had to succeed for the Project to come to fruition,
but there were still too many things left to chance. The technical expression
was multiple failure points. Not all of the operations were essential, but some
were, and if any one of those failed, the whole Project would collapse.

Nichevo.
Great rewards required great risks.

Grisha, Vladimir’s second in command,
answered the call. He had news. All of it was bad.

While the Gypsy witch kept Archangel and
his team busy, Vladimir’s main team had found Face-Off and the bloody girl!
They had stumbled upon them purely by accident, while following one of the
Lurker’s henchmen. The idiots hadn’t even known about the girl, and in any case
she had managed to escape. Vladimir’s team had captured Face-Off, but even that
small triumph had turned into shit very quickly, however.

Archangel controlled his breathing while
Grisha listed all the ways things had gone to hell. Vladimir and everybody on
his team except Grisha – he had been lucky enough to be running errands when
the Lurker struck – dead. The girl, apparently captured by Ultimate – how the
fuck had that happened? – and whisked off somewhere unknown. The Lurker,
Face-Off and two other Neos gone, also to parts unknown. Archangel’s search
efforts in New York had been rendered moot, unless their quarry decided to
return to the city, which wasn’t bloody likely. Grisha was nearly hysterical:
Archangel had to calm him down, something he was not used to doing, and
something he did not do well. It took some doing, but he managed to steady Grisha
enough to start acting professionally, at least.

In his business, failure often meant
death. Both missions had failed rather spectacularly. Archangel considered his
options. He could run. He could contact his handler and offer another possible
course of action. Or he could try to take down his bosses before they put him
down. None of his choices were optimal, and none offered a great chance of
success. It was a challenging situation.

Medved and Lady Shi emerged from the
building. They looked calm and composed, almost back to the way they had been
before facing the witch. There were subtle differences, however. There was more
distance between them than before. Archangel wondered if some of their visions
involved one of them meeting a bad end at the hands of the other. That wouldn’t
surprise him one bit.

“What now?” asked the Bear.

“We leave here. I will contact our
superiors and ask for new instructions,” Archangel replied as a decision
crystallized in his mind. Running would be futile. So would be trying to strike
back. Much as the idea bothered him, he would place himself at the mercy of his
superiors. He was a valuable asset. They would seek to use him.

He had made a promise to the dead witch,
and he intended to keep it.

 

Other books

Two-Faced by Sylvia Selfman, N. Selfman
Cracked by K. M. Walton
Badlands: The Lion's Den by Georgette St. Clair
Afterthoughts by Lynn Tincher
Sage Creek by Jill Gregory