Prologue

Storyteller

New member

Summary​

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Technology was controlled by unknown gods until it fails when a cult successfully resurrects the old gods.

Plot​

Survivors of technology faltering have come together to relearn the way of life and choose a side between the technology gods and the old gods. Some may choose to play as resurrected deities or unknown technology deities or your average human caught up in the middle. I left this vague so others could come up with their own twists.

Rules​

No god mode, no need to message me before jumping in unless you want, and play nice with others. If you jump in and need to leave, be kind and send a message to anyone who might be interacting with you. Basic BD rules.

Gods can die and either be gone for good if they were minor or weak. Transferred to another willing being or imprisoned.
 

Vera​

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"This isn't what I meant, none of this is what I meant." The old pontiac bounced over the potholes as the sky turned crimson in the rear view mirrors. Ahead the rolling blackouts continued, a few stalled cars dotted the roadside that Calvin swerved around while Melody twisted in her seat to check on their passenger.

"Look, I did what I had to do, and you weren't specific on the how. How was I supposed to know what the final piece would be?" The sandy haired girl in the backseat groaned as Calvin swerved around a dark shadow that seemed to spring from the night itself. Melody gripped the door handle. "The headlights are going to draw everything for a mile! We are the only lights!"

"Do you want me to drive in the blind? Just lucky the car would run and we got out of the city." They were now at least fifty miles outside of Nashville and headed to who knew where. Come daybreak nowhere in the world would be safe for a long time. "Is Lexi okay?"

"I don't know, she was at the center of everything. I got her out, that's what you hired me for."

~24 Hours Prior~

"Intention and manifestation are at least half the equation here. Tomorrow at the equinox when the stars align we will take back our earth from the scourge that has dampened it for so long. No longer will we be beholden to the new gods of technology and consumption. The old shall rise and make the earth whole again." Those around Vara stomped their feet and joined in a hummed unison. On bags, jackets, bracelets, necklaces, was the lightning bolt, encircled by a crown in front of a moon being hooked by a sickle. Symbol of The Pantheon and up shoot cult that Vara had no doubt had attracted federal attention at this point.

At least she hoped it had based on her last eight weeks working among the lowest order in search of a woman named Lexi. "With our sacrifice we will be rewarded with the powers of old and see the riches of our time fall from the hands of the corrupt. Technology gods will fall and falter. For today we prepare with feast and drink to draw the strength of those who came before."

Only years of professionalism kept the stoic expression locked on Vara's face while she wanted to roll her eyes. The entire occult, crystal, energy, mumbo jumbo wasn't her thing. Based on everything she had seen she wouldn't put it past this group to slit the throat of a virgin over some ancestral stone into a chalice. The gathering was concluded with another mumbled chant and the rest of the day proceeded in festivity and Vara continued her hunt for Lexi. Of course she wasn't one of the individuals in the upper ranks who were privy to the upcoming ceremony.

The entire rest of the day she pretended to be one of them, cheers to gods that she didn't believe in, and reciting monster stories. While they proclaimed themselves for the Greek gods many of the members were equal opportunists and sang the praise of any old deity. No one knew anything beyond it would start at the witching hour and it was time to move the doomsday clock back.

With each strained minute Vara was convinced that she hadn't charged enough for this job and how right she was. The collective gathered in a tight group around midnight and that was when things began to unravel. A man in robes with a thick white beard that stretched down his chest and made her think he would be more at home in a biker club than on a dais.

"Our brethren have gathered around the globe to join us, let the countdown begin." If Vera could have had a sit down with him she would have pointed out that midnight couldn't be special because in other places it wasn't midnight. Plastic goblets began to be passed around the crowd and Vera began to move, searching for the blonde girl with chocolate doe eyes, and a freckle on her right cheek and another on the end of her nose.

"We welcome the old and offer our bodies as vessels," from the center of the dias rose a group in outfits ranging from robes to flowers and leaves, chainmail and leather. The crowd had taken on a swaying quality that caused Vara to question the exact contents of the goblets. A smoky haze had filled the air and coiled along the ceiling that made her eyes water. At the center was Lexi in a shimmering blue dress.

The world seemed to be slipping as words were recited, and booming ensued. Vara fought her way to the stage as the world trembled. Somewhere along the way she had cut her hand, blood stained Lexi's hand where she grabbed and pulled at the young woman. Lexi's eyes were solid white and her body glowed like the moon over a lake. The world went dark aside from lanterns that flickered along the edge of the room.

~Present~

"I just picked up something on the radio. Looks like anything with a chip in it is fried. It's chaos in the cities." Calvin passed her a bottle of water, and she took a long swallow. "Cut looks nasty." Vara tilted her hand to study the angry swollen cut and nodded.

"I'll clean it up. Is Lexi awake yet?"

"No. What happened there?"

"I'm not sure it's hazy, but her eyes were white. The crowd was moving as one then they were writhing. It sounded like we were trapped in a bell. The Pantheon believed that technology was just a different and new magic. Ruled by deities that we don't have names for and they sucked the power from the old gods. With the old gods awakened that a war will be fought that will reshape the path of mankind." Vara took another sip of water and wished it was something stronger.

"I don't believe that bullshit, I think they are terrorists who managed to strike a blow." Twelve hours ago Vara would have agreed with him but now she wasn't as certain.
 

Morpheus God of Dreams and Nightmares​

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It began with a flicker of light, the first he had seen in so very long. Was it the sun? Was it the moon? Due to the passage of time, he could barely recall what either looked like. He vaguely remembered with the sun came warmth, but with the moon came comfort. Maybe that was what the light was: the moon. Maybe that was why his arm, weak from being unused, found the strength to reach for the blessed light. Just when it seemed as though his fingertips could touch it, the light disappeared. For a moment, his hand remained outstretched before his fingers gradually began to curl into a fist. The guttural, gut-wrenching scream he let out as the first bit of hope he experienced was snatched away filled the silence of the absolute darkness. He screamed until his throat felt raw, and he would have kept screaming had his voice not been drowned out by a sudden cornucopia of noise. Most would have found the sounds of crashing and shrieks to be unpleasant, but for one who had been banished into nothing, it was glorious.

The hold he had on reality was tenuous, but it was there. He could not yet feel the stone under his feet or the chill that came with the night air, but he was certain he traversed the world birthed by Mother Gaia. Somehow someone had found the key to unlock their two millennia long imprisonment, and things had…changed. Buildings had grown tall enough to nearly touch the domain of Zeus and Apollo. The beloved horses of Artemis who pulled carriages were gone. Yet despite the differences, one thing remained consistent: the wide-eyed wonder of the humans his ethereal form wafted amongst.

They were troubled by something though his knowledge of the world was too limited to decipher what. Their howls of frustration seemed to be centered on black square blocks which fitted in the palm of their hands. He had ceased caring about the trivial problems of mortals, but to understand this new realm he had to try for a war was coming. If he was free, it stood to reason his brethren, both the ones related by birth and those born of circumstances, lived once more as well. More importantly, was the possibility of the continued existence of the upstarts who dared to seal them away. Two diametrically opposed foes could not exist in unison. Not after the wrongs that were committed against those who were first in time. There would be a level of blood and destruction never before seen, but it would not happen immediately. He did not have to be as conversed in the way of war as Ares to understand they were currently at a disadvantage due to the forced ignorance caused by their captivity. Knowledge was needed, and it was needed quickly.

And few could learn quicker than Morpheus, the God of Dreams and Nightmares.

Phasing through the walls of the metallic cart that nearly struck him caused the strangest thing to happen. For a split second, the dreaded walker of dreams was visible. Or perhaps a better explanation was that he was physical. He could feel the cushion of the seat underneath him and saw his reflection in the tiny mirror. However, just as quickly as he was revealed, his form returned to its normal haze. All in all, the phenomenon could have been blamed as a trick of the human eye, but there was something deeper going on. An empty sensation that wasn't present when he was outside settled in the pit of his stomach. Curious…

But not as curious as the woman sleeping not so peacefully against the door of the cart. There was a familiarity about her despite the impossibility of them ever meeting before. An aura that reminded him of birds and lush farmland. Unable to resist the temptation to satisfy his curiosity, he closed his eyes and reached out and touched his index and middle finger against the center of her forehead. When he opened his eyes once more, he was no longer inside the metal cage. He stood before a pond so pure the bottom seemed endless. It was surrounded by trees without a trace of brown, and at the edge of the forestry, deer, wolves, bears, and lynxes all bowed their heads in respect.

His lips curled into a smile when realization struck him. He turned around and behind him stood a being he had nearly forgotten, a mere foot away. "Well, hello Artemis."

Location: Artemis's dream domain (for lack of a better term)

Interactions: Catonia

OOC: Here is my first contribution to the chaos. Hermes is coming soonish. In my mind, Morpheus is still trying to get his bearings from his captivity, and being in proximity of 'new' technology further weakens him.
 

Fritz Murphy​

"I'm sorry, sir," the Waffle House waitress apologized. "We seem to be having some technical difficulties today. You're welcome to enjoy your coffee while we figure out the issue."

"I̽t̍'̓s̔ ̓q̋ǔït̂e͝ ̊a͐l̇r̎ǐg̈́ĥẗ," the customer replied, his voice sounding like like a static-filled radio. "I̕'̒m͊ ̔ȉn̈́ ͛n̈o͝ ̅h̃u̔r͂r͗y͌.͑"

The young woman behind the counter tapped her hearing aid and wondered if its battery was dying before she pushed her horn-rimmed glasses up her nose to get a better look at him. He was a middle-aged man with electric blue eyes and lightning blonde hair, neither of which matched the rest of him. His skin was deeply tanned and his fingers were stained black and smelled like the the puddle of oil her car left in her garage. His clothes looked like they were hand-sewn from sections of rough wool cloth that had once been dyed but had bleached in the sun until only subtle hues remained. Where he'd rolled his sleeves up, she saw cords of tightly-wound muscles in his arms that coiled as he lifted the mug to his broad lips, curled in apparent amusement as he sipped his coffee carefully to avoid getting it into his scraggly mustache that matched the thin beard that made him look like he'd shaved in the dark.

He's some kind of mountain man, she thought dismissively before looking over to her tech guy, who was becoming increasingly frustrated with how badly the point-of-sale system was misbehaving. "How is it coming?"

"It's not," the young man replied, the waver in his voice betraying just how close he was to absolute defeat. "It makes no sense, it was working perfectly on my machine last night. I don't understand. Why would it...?"

The mountain man chuckled but then suddenly stopped and looked up a moment before the lights went out.

"Sorry for the inconvenience folks, we'll get the generators going and we'll be back up in no time!" The waitress said, suddenly rushing into action. The Waffle House emergency procedures had been drilled into her and every other employee so thoroughly that they didn't waste a moment.

"S͒ȍm̌e̔t͒h͒i͠ǹǵ ̽v̀e͐r͗y͒ ͘ȉn̽t̀e͠r̎e̔s͝t́ĩn͐ǵ ̅ís̄ ͂h̑äp̀p̈́e̿n̄ỉn͗g͘,̽" the man said to nobody in particular as he left the diner and made his way to his car, sipping his now stolen coffee, still in the slightly dirty Waffle House mug. He set the mug down on the hood of the slightly modified Willys Jeep, and one-by-one began lighting the oil lamps that he'd used to replace the old electrical headlights that never worked for him. Then with a grunt, he pulled the custom hand crank rod sticking out in front of the bumper and the old engine puttered to life. He grabbed the coffee from the hood and climbed inside, shifting into first and pulling away just as the lights flickered back to life in the Waffle House.

"Ȋ ͘c̈́a͒n͑ ̚t̽e̚l̿l͘ ͐t́h̆i̛s̀ ͋i͊s͌ ͗ṡo͋m̂ȅt̅h̉i͊ǹĝ ̽I̍ ̃d́o̍n̈́'̋t̅ ́w̌a͘n̂t́ ̊t̓o̓ ̈́m̓i̅s̐s͝.͊"
 

Brennan Colt Messenger of the Gods​

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It was a dark night, on a lonely highway when Brennan Colt died. It wasn't intentional. Despite the misfortune life had thrown his way in recent years, he enjoyed living. Hell, he would have preferred to stick around sixty or so more years or at least until his parents sang their last chorus. Pa was getting too old to trim hooves, and Ma, bless her soul, was starting to reach the point where she couldn't remember if she watered the animals. Lord knew Bo and Billy's lazy asses wouldn't step up to the plate. So no, Brennan did not plan to die, but unfortunately, when his body hit the roof and windshield of the Pontiac-funny how the mind latched on to the most insignificant details-that he thought would be his salvation, he didn't have much say in the matter.

~24 Hours Prior~

You all know what time it is. Lunch Time Vibe where our listeners control the airwaves. We got a special request from a young lady all the way out in Nashville to play Brennan C-

Before the notes of the country throwback could start, Brennan's calloused hand reached out to turn the radio off. A gray haired woman in the passenger seat with eyes like his tsked softly under her breath as she reached out to turn the music back on, but he gently pushed her hand away. With his hand that didn't hold the steering wheel of the beat up truck, he touched his index and middle fingers to his thumb and opened and closed them in the sign for no. Her lips opened to argue, but with a resigned sigh she slumped back in her seat to resume her knitting. He knew what she wanted to say. She missed his voice. She was starting to forget the way he said her name. It had been years since the blotched procedure to remove lesions around his vocal cords left him essentially mute, and his attempts at forcing everyone to forget the man he used to be was cruel. Maybe it was, but could he really be at fault for not wanting to be reminded of the life he could have had if the surgeon was a little more careful? He loved the family ranch, truly he did. However, making a living off of music was his dream, and he had gotten so close. Rather than letting the resentment ruin what had been until that point a good day, he tapped on his mother's thigh to get her attention and held up his pinky and index finger and outstretched his thumb. I love you.

"I love you too."

He left the truck running when they arrived at the feed store and hopped out with his order in hand. He tipped his hat in greeting to Kelsey, and slid the list over to her. Unlike his family that learned sign language to communicate with him, Kelsey had to rely on pen and paper. Not that it mattered. She could talk the ears off a hare without taking a breath. "Morning Brennan. Darn system's been acting wonky all day, cutting on and off. I can't keep it on long enough to process any orders." She explained with a huff as she placed her hands on her hips.

He turned the page over and plucked the pen he kept handy from his shirt pocket. "Got to feed our chickens and heading out to Kentucky at the crack of dawn. Word is good on the payment." If he didn't get the feed that day, the hens were going to be pissy.

She nodded in agreement for the Colts had never failed to repay a debt, but before she could say either yes or no, a crash sounded outside. Fearing the worst, he rushed outside but to his relief his mother was fine. Two cars had collided at the intersection where the traffic light had presumably gone out.

It wasn't the only bizarre event that occurred. When they arrived back home, the power was out, and all of their animals seemed spooked. Hunkering down to wait out a power outage was nothing new, but the earthquake that shook the very foundation of their farmhouse?

Yeah. Brennan momentarily thought that the end of times Pastor Willis spoke about on Sundays was upon them.

It was a theory quickly dispelled because if there was a rapture, Ma Colt would have been the first spirited away.

When it became clear their cellphone service wasn't coming back anytime soon, Brennan threw on his jacket and grabbed his keys. I'm going to get Pa from the Barn. Dangerous out there with the traffic lights out. He explained and after a kiss to his mother's head and a promise he'd drive safe, he was out. Or so he thought. No matter how many times he turned the key to his pickup truck, the damn thing wouldn't crank. Battery must have died. He wasn't thrilled about having to hitchhike, but it wouldn't be the first time.

But it was the last time because a speeding car with faulty headlights killed Brennan Colt.

~~Present~~

The crumpled heap of flesh on the ground felt no pain, but there was a soothing sense of acceptance as scenes before his life flashed before the unseeing eyes. Birthday parties, fights with his brothers, fights for his brothers, time outs and rewards, first love, first lost, stepping into the recording studio, the sad faces staring down at him after surgery…And a pair of sandals. They reminded him of the ones his grandpa used to grill in on a summer day, but attached to them were a pair of golden wings. Suddenly he was back on the old rickety porch railing at his grandparents house. Instead of a blanket posing as a cape wrapped around his shoulders giving him the courage to jump, it was the sandals. The dark irises of the body morphed into a blue resembling the clearest sky on a summer day because when Brennan stepped off into the abyss…

Hermes flew again.

Location: Middle of the Street

Interactions: Catonia

OOC: A new player has entered the field. Greetings! The tech side needed love too.
 

Lexi​

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The woman in the ether turned to look, who had dared to roam in her forest so brazen without proper homage. Especially someone who knew her name, and that meant they knew better. The silver hair rippled as she turned to face the dark figure. Grass shifted and swayed in an unnatural way, as if he were moving through water when he stepped forward. Recognition flickered within the sapphire doe eyes. Morpheus.

How long had it been? It wasn't like him to appear in his true form, he preferred apparitions, and illusions to be picked apart. The memories were slow to return, they had fought to maintain their place, but lost. A long sleep. Feuding among themselves helped the other gods because their feuding had bled into mortal ties.

Foreign memories were just outside like bubbles rising through the water. Lights without fire, buildings that touched the sky, and chariots without horses. It was too much. Forests wiped out and pain from the land. So much pain. It must have been unbearable for her earth sister Persephone and Demeter.

"Morphus, it's not like you to appear in true form. Tell me what's happened? Why can't I manifest in my physical form?" Has Morphus come to find her in the dream world, had something happened to only her?
 

Vara​

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Calvin turned to look back at Lexi in the backseat, the cabin should have been coming up soon. The young woman's chest rose and fell in a deep rhythmic pace, seemingly like she didn't have a care in the world. A few people waved at them but Calvin refused to stop and Vara wasn't going to disagree with that decision. It was a million wonders their own vehicle was running.

"Does she feel off to you?" His gaze flitted from the rearview mirror to the road as Vara turned in her set to study Lexi. Something had happened in that chamber but it was impossible to say for certain what. A faint shimmer still surrounded her that was enough to unnerve Vara as she turned in her seat to look at Lexi.

"You could say that." As Vara turned in the seat, her eyes widened and she stomped the floor in search of a brake pedal that wasn't there. "Look out!"

The seat belt dug into her flesh and her head whipped forward as the car back end fish tailed. Vara's eyes squished into tight lines as a solid thump rattled the car. "FuckFuckFuck. You hit a person!" Dust billowed around them in the headlights as Vara yanked the seatbelt free from its clasp. Every sense seemed to be heightened and hinging on that moment, seared forever into her memory. The cold plastic of the handle, the creak of the door, gravel giving way under her sneakers.

"Why the hell was he on the road?"

"Oh god!" Blood trickled from more places than she could count, jagged bone jutted out. Warm blood soaked her like a macabre finger painting endeavor. Each breath was a bubbling shutter as Vara tried and failed to offer some comfort. "Call someone!"
 

Calvin​

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"In case you forgot, they are dead, and that isn't my speciality." A rough hand ran tousled his sandy hair. It wasn't the first death in exchange for transportation, but typically they had been more willing participants.

The feeling of unease continued to grow and he began to wonder if it had been wise to retrieve Lexi. Of course the truth had broken the woman's already fragile state, pushed her into the arms of strangers that sought to feed on the weak. He hadn't been able to go into that den of vipers on his own, but he had never imagined in a millennia that they'd find a way to crack the prison.

Or had something else happened? Calvin had been so focused on melding mankind to the stars with the help of his kin. NASA, Space-X, and others; all reaching to the stairs. A new playground for their kind. The chestnut haired man took a last shuddering breath as Vara tried to turn his head.

"Vara, he's gone. We need to go." He layered his voice with the hint of a command that never seemed to sway the woman.

"Have you lost your mind? We, you, just killed someone."

"We have no working phone. We can send someone when we reach the next town. Dead is dead."

"I'm not going to jail for you." Were the last words Calvin heard when the prone figure on the ground sucked in a shuddering breath. Everything went dark, the car sputtered and died, as the man on the ground sucked in a deep breath. Calvin's physical body crumpled to the ground as his ethereal form sought its next physical form.

For the span of an hour vehicles worked sporadically fueling the conspiracy theories that terrorist attacks had occurred.

The engine of the Supra revved to another octave, Calvin stroked the red beard, and looked at the long row of red lights. "Brothers we have problems," he spoke into the radio with a brusk voice that wasn't yet familiar to his ears.

(OOC- so gods physical forms can be killed, my thoughts on this matter. They transfer to a new physical form if they are strong and have a willing subject. Gods can be imprisoned or outright killed. To outright kill I imagine it's a minor god with a small following. Open to thoughts. )
 

Fritz Murphy​

Despite the caution plate mounted on the passenger's side dash, which asserted that the top-speed in 3 high was 60 mph, the 1944 Willys-Overland MB Jeep was capable of 65 in absolutely ideal conditions. At that speed, the little engine screamed as it bounced unsteadily down I-65 towards Nashville. It wasn't really ever meant for such driving, so Fritz stuck to the rightmost lane at all times and waved at everyone to pass him. Though it did have the benefit that it was no more or less unstable over the numerous potholes than it was over smooth surfaces.

The coffee hadn't even lasted him to the end of Kentucky. He knew there was another Waffle House in Franklin just before he crossed into Tennessee, but his gut told him that whatever was happening down south wasn't something that would wait for him. So with a practiced hand, he grabbed an unlabeled mason jar filled with a clear liquid from under the tarp that held down all his worldly belongings in the back. With a flick of his thumb, he flipped the lid off and was suddenly hit with a smell that reminded him of paint thinner mixed with just a hint of cinnamon. For the sake of plausible deniability, he filled the Waffle House coffee mug before resealing the jar and tucking it away again.

Just then, a flash lit up the road some distance ahead. With a curious glint in his eye, he lifted the mug to his mouth, discovering that the liquid tasted better than it smelled, moments before he had to set it back on the dash so he could downshift and pull over at an angle behind an old Pontiac and a young woman waving at him to stop.

Leaving the engine running, Fritz stepped out of the doorless Jeep and walked over to Vara, taking a sip from his illicit coffee mug.

"W̆h͂āt̉ ̄s̈èë́m͆s̔ ́t́o̍ ͛b̚e̛ ͝t̎h̀e͋ ̂p̐r͗o̿b̌l̈́e͑ḿ?"
 

Jax Nova​

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Roughly 2000 miles westward, waves lapped at the private beach overshadowed by a cylindrical house that jutted out off the crest of a hill and was primarily held up by huge stilts extending down to the beach below. Extending even farther over the beach was a balcony that contained a glass-bottomed pool in which old men in seemingly disposable suits that cost in the mid-five figures and nearly-naked women played a variation of water polo in which the latter sat atop the former's shoulders and very few actual rules were enforced. Two men lay sprawled out on floating pool chairs amidst the increasingly-sexual chaos, sipping brightly-coloured drinks from hand-carved crystal glassware while a stoic man in a tuxedo stood nearby, continually refilling their drinks as they talked. The two men wore matching sunglasses that were entirely too dark for this time of night.

"I'm calling you right now," the younger man said as he waved his free hand to one side of the glasses. He had black hair, blue eyes, the body composition of someone whose diet consisted mainly of stimulants and whose only calories came from alcohol, and the face that seamlessly blended the condescending expression of a Starbucks barista with the ennui of a struggling artist at his own exhibition. "But you have to pick up."

"Why are you calling? I'm two feet away, probably less," the older man argued. He might have once looked the same as the younger man, but a toll had been taken on his body by twenty years of secretly binging at the McDonald's on the way home from eating at triple Michelin-star restaurants that never seemed to actually serve much food. His hair was also black, but the implants never really blended in very well, so it was obvious how thin it was getting. "Oh, something's happening. Hello?"

The younger man, technocrat Jax Nova, marveled at just how well his own technology worked. Behind the glasses, he saw a holographic image of the older man's face appear in the air in front of him. Using just the sound of his voice, it recreated the old man's confused expression perfectly.

"Coming in loud and clear, how about me?"

"I can see your smug face," the billionaire investor said with a chuckle. "This works even when you're calling someone on an old phone?"

"Of course," Nova lied. It wasn't exactly untrue, they just hadn't tested it yet. In fact, this had been the first successful test ever. His engineers had begged him not to do it, but he knew they always "needed a couple more weeks to get everything working," so he fully disregarded their expert opinions and did it anyway. That's why they paid him the big bucks. "And I'm only smug because I know you'll give me a billion this angel round, because I know you know this will make you the first trillionaire. Oh, hold on. I'm getting another call."

Nova paddled his way to the side of the pool and awkwardly pulled himself out of the floating chair and up onto the deck before waving his hand again, frantically trying to switch to the incoming call.

"Hello?"

"Sir…"

"Avery, I told you to hold my calls. Consider yourself fired. Have the paperwork sent over to me first thing tomorrow."

"Sir, I appreciate that, but this is something you want to hear."

"Is it? You're an expert on what I want to hear now?"

"..."

"Well, let's hear it, and then I'll tell you why you're wrong and why you now owe me back pay for the last two weeks."

"Sir, there was an incident near Nashville in which there were reports of supernatural explosions and widespread blackouts."

"That smells like my brother," Nova replied, then started workshopping his own words. "It smells like my sibling. Like my sinister sibling. There it is. Something smells like my sinister sibling."

"Uh, well put, sir," Avery replied, trying not to let the distaste for his boss shape the sound of his voice. "But we have eyes on him at a Waffle House in Kentucky at the time."

Nova spent a silent moment studying the distasteful expression he could see Avery making from the reconstruction in his glasses. If the situation had been any less serious, he would be punishing Avery already. Instead, he made a mental note to do it later.

"One of his militant luddite associates?"

"We don't think so, sir. When the blackouts started, he took off straight towards them. If he'd known about them, he wouldn't have wanted to implicate himself. We think he's trying to figure out what's going on."

"That can't be good."

"And we got a radio message."

"You're telling me we're so far behind the curve that someone else is telling us about it before you even told me? Unbelievable. Tell me you got a recording, and then put it on."

"We did," Avery said shortly before his corporate neutral face was replaced by a man with a fresh hipster haircut.

"Brothers, we have problems."

"Fuck," Nova exclaimed under his breath.

"Yes, sir, we think it's Calvin in a new host."

"Here's what I want you to do, in the order I want you to do it: patch me through a local radio tower so I can get back to him, then get the pilots to prep my jet and get a flight plan ready that puts me near enough to the incident but not so near that the plane might be affected. No ETA on when I'll get to the runway, but I want those engines spun up when I get there. Finally, notify the other C-suites and invite them to join me. And make sure the jet's bar and medicine cabinet are well-stocked. Those greedy pricks always take everything before I even get there."

"And the Board?"

"Did I say the Board? If I wanted you to notify the Board, I would have said so. I'm this close to firing you again, Avery. Now get to work."

Nova turned back to the men playing in his pool.

"Gentlemen, I have a small matter I need to attend to. Thanks for coming to this demo, feel free to enjoy my hospitality as long as you want. There should be enough bedrooms here if you don't want to go back to the hotel."

Back inside, Nova stripped down, showered, and changed into a suit that wasn't reeking of chlorine and alcohol.

"Okay sir, you're on the air in Tennessee."

"Calvin? Are you there? This is Jax. What's happening?"
 

Morpheus, God of Dreams and Nightmares​

Ah. It appeared her ignorance mirrored his own. Rather than immediately answer the pertinent questions, Morpheus clasped his hands behind his back as he looked up to the sky to collect his thoughts. Was being sentenced to an eternity in paradise a convenience bestowed upon the greater gods? As quickly as the flare of envy sparked, it was doused. Despite how harsh his penalty, he coveted no other domains, including that of his oldest friend. "I loathe to be the bearer of bad news, but we were not the victors in our war against the upstarts and were sealed away. If memory serves me correctly, it was Hephaestus who was the first to fall. Without his weaponry, we were likely little more than lambs to the slaughter." He chose to start with the easier of her inquiries because the second would be pure speculation.

"I prefer my non corporeal existence, but currently I lack the power to solidify at will as well. As improbable as the idea may seem, I suspect it's due to my physical form being destroyed." He paused for a moment to allow her the opportunity to digest the information. "When Zeus, Hera, Hades, and the others fought the Titans, the Titans could not be killed, but only sealed. The same should apply for us, but…do you recall Pan? We scoffed at the rumors of his death and assumed he had gone off on some adventure or into hiding, but what if he was the trial? The test to see if it were possible?" It was a theory he had crafted out of morbid necessity during the times when the isolation became maddening, and he begged for death. Surely, if Pan could succumb to mortality, Morpheus should have been able to do the same.

Yet there was one flaw in his reasoning. Artemis potentially did have a physical form. "That doesn't answer the question of why you can't manifest. I entered your realm through the dreams of a young woman asleep in a metal carriage. Your energy surrendering her was nearly palpable. Had it not been for how no mortal could compare to the appearance of a goddess, I would have thought you to be her. Or…her to be you."

Location: Artemis's dream domain (for lack of a better term)

Interactions: Catonia

OOC: I'm excited to write with y'all too even though I'm deep in Greek lore over here lol! Hermes and my next starter should be up within the next few days.
 

Brennan Colt, Messenger of the Gods​

What was this feeling? The involuntary twitch of fingers. The near unbearable heat flowing through veins. The ache that came with each rise and fall of the chest. Was it what the mortals called pain? Was the ache that bordered on torture the last sensation they felt before he, the messenger of the gods, guided them to the afterlife?

Though the words were garbled and indistinct, Hermes recognized the tones of the voices that surrounded him. They were filled with the sort of panic heard only in the most dire of circumstances, when death was unexpected and sudden. Was it he whom they thought had died? Had each breath not felt like Hephaestus himself had taken offense to his ribcage and used it as his anvil, he would have laughed. A god could not die, and until that moment, pain–no, agony–was a foreign concept. "As…Asclepius…Are you there?" The suffering in his voice overshadowed the ever present musical tilt.

The bluer than naturally possible eyes squeezed shut, and inch by tortuous inch, he tried to move his outstretched arm closer to his body in order to push himself up. Someone nearby spoke of something called a phone and jail before an audible thump was heard. The two dim flames that had lingered in the corner of his vision vanished, and pure darkness covered the area.

Like the flames, the heaviness that had shackled the one who once freely flew the skies dissipated. He groaned as the displaced bones in his arms audibly popped back into place during his arduous journey to push himself to his hands and knees. However before he could fully stand to his feet, two glaring lights shone directly in his face. The alleviation of his suffering proved to be temporary, and the strength in his still broken legs left him, sending him collapsing back to the ground.

"Have you stolen the sun and moon?" That time when he spoke to no one person in particular, his voice was soft and raspy as if rusty from years of unuse.

Location: Middle of the Street

Interactions: Catonia hyralt

OOC: Slowly yet surely working my way through my backlog. I think my boy's going to need some band aids.
 

Sacrifices​

Vera was stunned into a stupor when Calvin vanished, and the broken man before her spoke. Without the benefit of forethought she jumped, jaw going slack as the man before her seemed to pull himself together like a rag doll. A pale trembling hand shot to her mouth painting the flesh crimson.

“Calvin!” The shrill pitch pierced the eerily quiet night, but no one answered back. No movement from the backseat seemed to indicate that Lexi was still in her dream world. “Sir, I think you need to lay back down until I can get help. We didn’t see you. You were hit by a car.” Vera shrugged out of her jacket and tried to offer it as a pillow.

In the distance she could see two bouncing lights that formed perfect circles accompanied by a chugging sputter of an engine that reminded her of an old tractor. “I think something is coming, maybe they can help us. I don’t know where my friend went.” Eventually the chugging became a sputtering that in the dim light looked like a vintage Jeep.

Leaving the engine running, Fritz stepped out of the doorless Jeep and walked over to Vara, taking a sip from his illicit coffee mug.

"W̆h͂āt̉ ̄s̈èë́m͆s̔ ́t́o̍ ͛b̚e̛ ͝t̎h̀e͋ ̂p̐r͗o̿b̌l̈́e͑ḿ?"

The voice seemed like one of the poltergeist movies with the voice through the static television. “This man needs medical attention, we struck him, and I was traveling with another man but he vanished. Is your phone working?”

“Ḋo͝e͋ś ̔h̔e̅?̎” Fritz questioned as he reached a hand into his pocket and pulled out a pipe, which he stuck into his mouth before walking closer to Brennan to get a better look. “Ǐ'̀v̈́ē ̅n̍e̛v̈́e͑r̈́ ̋l̔a͐i̾d͑ ̿m͝y̔ ͝h̆a̔ńd͋s̿ ͠o͝n͝ ̕a͘ ͊w͝o͒r̅k̇i̓n͘g͝ ̂p̐h͌o͌n͘e̎,̎ ̍án̈́d̅ ͊I͆ ̏d̔o͝n̊'̈́t̾ ̂ín̑t̛e͐n̐d̚ ͛t̎ö́ ̛s̀t̋a̽r͂t͑ ̚n̔ơw͒.͐ ̛ ̅D̃óë́s͆n̓'̕t͝ ̍y͛óu̍r̒ ̍p̊h͌o̚n̍ȅ ̿ẁo͘r̀k̈?̂”

Fritz pulled some dried green flowers from his pocket and started packing them into the bowl of the pipe as he leaned over Brennan. “Y̓ǒŭ ̉s͠ée̔m͒ ̅t̓o̊ ͝b̋e̅ ̑d̊o̓ḯn͆g͂ ̐r̄a͊t̋h́e͋r͐ ̓w̾e͌l͑l̎ ̅f̑o͌r̿ ͐s̛ơm̍e͋ǒn̛ě ̏w̎h̒ȍ ̆w̑ä́s͒ ͐j͒ūśt̀ ̔r̚u̒n͐ ̏o̽v͆e͠r͛ ̒a̽n̄d̎ ͌ḱi͂ĺl̈́ȇd͊.̊”

Cars. Phones. All were meaningless words to Hermes when the immediate concern was the excruciating pain in his legs. He needed Asclepius, not the chatter taking place above him. If the healer wasn’t available, he’d settle for the cursed light blinding him to be gone or to be rid of the incessant ringing in his ears. “Twas not my time to cross the River Styx.” Nor would it ever be. Certainly not by being ran over. No mortal aside from Hercules would be capable of such a feat.

“S͗ȗn͊ ͊a͝n͋d̈́ ̃m̍o͊òn͂ ̓án̋d̃ ͘R̓i̓v͊èr͐ ̎S͝ẗ́ýx̊,” Fritz repeated, his pipe bouncing up and down as he mumbled mainly to himself. “V͆e̊r̛y̐ ̓ćǔr͛i͐ơȗs̕.͊ ̚ ͌P̆e͝r̓h̔a̔p̂s̀ ́a͊ ͐s̉m͒ăl̎l̈́ ̽l͂ḯb́a͛t͠i̍o͌ǹ ̆ẗ́ò ̎c̾e̚l̔èb͊r͛a͆ẗ́ẽ ̾y̏o͐úr̚ ̕c̄ōn͑t͌i̒n̛ũěd̛ ̈e̾x͝i̾ṡt̐e̓n̒c̛e͝?̀ ̉ ̈I̽t͝ ̈m͑ïg̓h͗t̀ ̀àl͒s͛ö ͐h̚ë́ĺp͝ ͝ẘi̛t͛ḧ ̕t͝h̓e͋ ̆p̂ȃḯn̂.͋”

Fritz held out the coffee mug, white with yellow letters spelling WAFFLE HOUSE on the side. Inside, a clear liquid composed mostly of pure alcohol slowly evaporated in the warm night air. At this rate, if he held the mug out for a few more minutes it would be entirely empty.

Acceptance was not easy, but Hermes once again pushed himself to his knees fueled by the promise of spirits. His right arm trembled under the pressure of holding up his body while he used the left to take hold of the strangely shaped goblet. If he could not obtain heavenly relief, earthly would have to do. However, the liquid he gulped was not that of the sweet wine he shared in days long past. The burn was unpleasant to the point where more dripped down to the ground as he sputtered than his actual throat.

With the male proving his only worth to be adding to Hermes list of ailments, he panted out, “Woman. Please. I beg of you to free me of that light.” He had not thought it possible for his voice to worsen but the liquid had done just that. “Just being able to see would bring relief.”

Fritz looked from the man to the car’s headlights and then roughly in the direction of the woman beyond them. “I think this man may be referring to your headlights,” he noted as he retrieved the now-empty mug and stood up. He gave some consideration to the idea of turning off the headlights himself, and they flickered for a moment as he did, but decided that solution would be far too final. Instead, he pulled a thin strip of wood from a pocket and walked over to the dim gas lamps that served as his Jeep’s headlights. He dipped the wood into the open top of the lamp and pulled out a small ember of fire that he used to light his pipe.

“Oh um, I,” god was the man one of the cultists nuts who’d simply avoided being in that auditorium. “You mentioned the river Styx, I don’t suppose you’d be willing to share your thoughts about old gods?” Seemed like an insensitive question to ask someone just struck by a car. Even as she watched the young man seemed to be patching himself together at an astounding pace. “And no, my phone hasn’t worked since…in hours. Just like the rest of the world.”

Vera pulled herself to standing and walked around the car Lexi had a faint glow surrounding her. It seemed to have brightened to a new hue. “Ummm, one moment.” Vera turned off the lights by reaching through the open window before moving to the back seat. She placed a hand on Lexi’s cool skin then placed two fingers against her neck. The pulse was slow and steady.

“I think we should consider moving, my friend said it wouldn’t be safe on the roads. That he had a cabin.”

With the darkness, once again came healing. Hermes gritted his teeth as the bones in his legs returned to their rightful place. Though he mentally cursed Asclepius with every foul name in his vocabulary, the relief he felt when his body was whole soothed most of his rage. There was a moment when he stumbled once he was on his feet but it was due to being unfamiliar with the concept of walking more so than pain. The ground was made for those who knew not the joy of flight. Which…apparently he had joined the ranks? There were talks of old gods, but his attention was drawn to the material covering his feet. His sandals were gone?

Fritz too felt more comfortable without the electrical lights. There was still a light on inside the car, but it was dim enough now that he noticed the glowing woman in the back seat for the first time. Inhaling through his pipe cast an orange glow upwards onto his face from the lit plant matter in the bowl. With his curiosity only growing with Vera’s question, he walked back over to Brennan. “W̽h͛ȧt̾’͑s̓ ̑t̍h͘i͊s͆ ̊áb̍óu͑t̏ ͆ẗh̃ẻ ͒o͌l͒d̽ ͊g̀o͠d̈́s̔?͐”

“It’s just something crazy, and the timing is odd. Forget I said anything, if ,I’m sorry I didn’t catch your name.” She looked to the man that had been dead only moments before. The prickle of heart rate inching up seemed to put her on edge as she recalled every zombie movie she had seen. Not to mention the rasp of the other man's voice. “For that matter, I don’t recall catching yours either.”

Interesting…They both spoke as though they had knowledge of his kind. Hermes placed one hand on the crook of his shoulder and rolled his neck to put a few more lingering pieces of himself together. “You do not speak with the tongue of the insane. Neither of you do.” He mused.

“T̄h͆a̋t̊’͋s̍ ͋v̆e̎ȑỷ ͌h́ë́ȃr̈́t͗e͆n͝ĭn͝g͘ ̂ťo͂ ́b͝é ͛t̎ơl̉d̽,͆” Fritz replied, blowing a few rings of smoke as he paused to gather his thoughts. “T̉h͊e͂ ͌c̔ŏn̎s̈́e͘n̄s̑u͝s̔ ͗i͑s̕ ͆g̔e̎n͂e̽ŕa̚l̀ľÿ ͊q̔u͗i̇t͌e͂ ̅t͊h͠e̍ ̅o͂p̒p̂o͆s̀i͋t̽e̓.́ ̾ ̚A͆t̊ ̿l͗e̊ä́s͆t̑ ̓ǎs̉ ͘ḟăr͋ ̀a̍ŝ ̌I͝’̐m̀ ̒ċỏn̆c̈́e͛r̃n̅e͝d̋.̇”

Fritz shot a quick look at Vera before turning his eyes back to Brennan. “M̆o̚s̈t̾ ̏o̊f̓ ̉l͝a͐t͂ẽ ̃c̎a͂l͑l̓ ̃m͒ẻ Fritz,” he bowed his head to the both of them in turn. “But I remain intrigued about this mention of the old gods. I don’t know much, but there are two things in which I am something of an expert: power outages and words spoken in hushed tones only face-to-face, and if the words I’ve been hearing are true, and you all have something to do with both old gods and the power outages, then I suggest we make haste for that cabin because we’re all in imminent danger.”

A prickling sensation in the corners of his mind caused his brow to furrow at the question of his name. Hiding his identity to mingle with mortals wasn’t unheard of, but one name in particular seemed to echo in his consciousness. “Brennan.” He responded though there seemed to be uncertainty. How could a name be both unfamiliar yet natural to speak?

It was a mystery he would not linger upon for the more pressing concern was regaining his ability to fly. He vaguely recalled the woman mentioning the sudden disappearance of a friend. For her and this Fritz to know of the old gods and a hasty retreat having been made, there was a likely culprit tied to one of the two. “I…know not of these…power outages or cabins, but I shall journey with you.”

“Nice to meet you, Fritz and Brennan. You’re not one of them I hope, the New Order.” Vera finally pulled back from Lexi and looked around once more. “We were on our way out of Nashville, the earth shook, communication went out, the city went dark, and everything stopped working. They are saying that it was the work of terrorists.”

“I’ve never been part of any order, new or otherwise,” Fritz said, narrowing his eyes at Vera. “Quite the opposite, in fact. And if you by your existence or deeds have any intention to be a thorn in the side of this or any order, then my resources are entirely at your disposal. And you will need them, because those who hunt me will also hunt you. And their resources are almost without limit.

“As for terrorists, I can safely rule out that possibility,” Fritz said through a mouthful of sweet-smelling smoke that danced languidly in the dim light. “I would know.”

“Well my friend was injured in the escape it seems. She’s been unconscious for several hours.” Perhaps the group had been right, but that locked a chill into her skin harsher than winter solstice. “Then Calvin just vanished.” Vera gestured to the still glowing motionless woman resting in the backseat without a care in the world.

Again Vera glanced at both of the strange men, one seemed to have a mischievous glimmer each time he exhaled a smoke ring while the other was calm. “How can you rule that out?” Now Vera folded her arms across her chest and wished for the weight of a gun on her hip like old days. The entire month felt like dealing with a swarm of psychics . “In my experience those who claim to know something without a doubt often have a tie or a hand in the matter.”

Hermes Brennan accepted his place as an observer to the conversation taking place for the terminology was impossible to decipher at the speed they spoke. He was clever in his own right, but not all knowing. “Nashville?” He asked Vera but his gaze shifted quickly to Fritz. “Terrorists?”

Finally, he was left with no choice but to raise both of his hands to interject. “Where am I? Is this…not Greece?”

“Nashville’s a city not far from here,” Fritz explained to Brennan, then thought for a moment. “A megalopolis, if you prefer. Greeks might have called it Nashopolis. But it’s not Greek. Terrorists are the kind of people who cause power outages. I guess that’s from Latin. I don’t remember my Greek well enough to know what it is in Greek.

“I would love to play coy for as long as you are,” he turned to Vera. “But I’m afraid we’re running out of time. When technology fails and there was no obvious reason for it, that was me. When technology fails because someone actively sabotaged it, that’s a sacrifice in my name. This outage was neither. So I know it was the result of something outside of my domain. Unintended consequences of something beyond the technological realm. Word is that some unhinged people around here were fixing to bring back the old gods. I hear words like that all the time. But couple that with the mysterious outage and I have to wonder if they succeeded.

“And then I meet someone who knows about the River Styx, talks about stealing the sun and moon, and doesn’t know a lot of choice words cooked up in the last millennium, and it gets me wondering.”

There was one word Hermes did know. “Sacrifice?” Sacrifices were only to be made in the names of the gods, and Fritz was no god that Hermes was aware.

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“Let’s get moving,” Fritz said as he rounded his ancient Jeep and hopped up inside. Immediately, he paused because his car normally sputtered at least and usually died whenever he touched it. Instead, he quietly listened as the engine practically purred.

“That’s unusual,” he muttered under his breath before taking advantage of the open-top design, standing up and leaning over the flat windscreen. “You know where this cabin is, so lead the way. I’ll follow as closely as I can. Those who hunt us are likely on their way already – probably in some high-tech experimental plane, the likes of which we can’t even imagine!”





“The nose is falling off,” Avery cried as he followed Jax out of the limo onto the tarmac in front of Jax’s private hangar at SFO, where a long, slender plane was sitting with its engines fired up, ready and waiting.

“What do you know about planes?” Jax sighed as he rolled his eyes, then gave the pilot a wave. Without any extra input, his glasses dialed out to the cockpit.

“I know the nose isn’t supposed to fall off, for a start.”

“This is a Concorde Jet, it can cruise faster than Mach 2 at an altitude of 60,000 feet.”

“Oh,” replied Avery. “Is that good?”

“Only military planes can fly faster. We’ll barely have time to sit down before we’re there,” Jax said before the pilot’s face appeared on his glasses, just as he started to climb the stairs up to the cabin. “We need to get to Nashville as fast as possible.”

“On a scale from legal to immediately arrested, how fast?” The pilot asked in a posh British accent that made Jax feel like he was talking to a prince or at least a duke.

“Is that on the table?” Jax was legitimately surprised as he glanced at the small window to the cockpit. The pilot had darker skin but a full mane of sun bleached blonde hair that made him look like a lion. “No, no, nobody else knows how to fly this. Only the laws that have a fine and we’ll pay them.”

“Very good, sir.”

“Oh, and we need to land on the west side of the city,” Jax said as he stepped inside the cramped cabin. Where once there had been 100 seats in 50 rows of 2, there was now a small board room with a projector, a lavish bathroom, and a private bedroom in the back. Jax sat down at the head of the board room table and motioned to Avery to sit further down. An attractive flight attendant sealed the door and started preparing refreshments. “The east side is out of commission, including the airport.”

“There’s a small commercial airport, but the runway is too short for a standard landing. We’ll have to use reverse thrust.”

“What does that mean?”

“Hard landing and more fines.”

“No problem, just do it.” Jax said, then waved his hand around in front of his face until it hung up. “Calvin gave us an exact position, but he said that someone just rolled up in an old Jeep before he left.”

“Your brother?” Avery asked, visibly shaking as the engines began to spin up and the plane pulled away from the hangar, taxiing towards the runway.

“Almost certainly.”

“Cabin crew prepare for hard takeoff,” the pilot’s voice announced just as the attendant was starting to set out the refreshments. Before Jax could grab his, she picked it up again and threw it out before strapping herself into a fold-down chair.

“You know, you never explained why the nose looks like it’s falling off.”

“It tilts down for takeoff and landing, but tilts up for cruise.”

“Oh, why don’t normal planes do that?”

“Normal planes don’t have to be aerodynamic enough for supersonic flight.”

“That sounds very modern, I guess this is all new technology?”

“Old, actually,” Jax shrugged. “Last flight was in 2003.”

Avery knew what he wanted to ask, but was sure he wouldn’t like the answer. He waited until they were out on the runway.

“Why did they stop?”

“Partly because it was so expensive,” Jax sighed, and the engines started to spin up. “But mostly because one crashed.”

Jax’s words were drowned out by the roar of the afterburners as they tore across the runway, then pulled into a near-vertical climb out over San Francisco Bay. The plane’s nose finished tilting back up just in time to break the sound barrier as they raced towards cruising altitude and the plane’s max speed. The resulting sonic boom shook every foundation and rattled every window of every building in the greater Bay area.

Inside the cabin, the sound of the engines suddenly faded away when they broke the sound barrier, as the plane outpaced the soundwaves themselves. There was still a dull rumble as the engines rattled the airframe directly, but otherwise it was eerily quiet.

“That’s better,” Jax smiled at Avery, who looked like he was on the verge of tears. “As I was saying – my brother…”

Just then, the projector and Jax’s glasses both flickered to life but instead of projecting an image onto the screen at the front of the cabin, they both cast their rays to an empty space at the table across from Jax where their interference pattern generated a hologram of a thin young college-aged girl in bright clothes and big, pristine sneakers, which she kicked up onto the table and leaned back as if she were sitting on a chair, which she wasn’t. She was, however, chewing gum and typing on her phone, from which she never looked up.

“...your brother?” She asked, her voice ringing out from every speaker in the vicinity, from the projection sound system, to Jax’s glasses and even the flight attendant’s phone. Avery looked shaken for a moment, as he pulled out his own phone and wondered what was going on, but he’d seen enough weird stuff working for Jax that this didn’t even register as particularly unusual.

“Tally,” Jax put on his best fake smile. “Just who I wanted to see. Whoever knocked out the Nashville power grid seems to be with my brother now, which makes it much harder to get ahold of them and confirm what Calvin told us. We need someone old school, low tech enough not to get tripped up by my brother’s way with technology, but also someone with unquestionable loyalty. We don’t want to send Fritz someone he can convert.”

“Just to bring us the terrorists, right?” Tally clarified without looking up. “Not to hurt Fritz.”

“Sure.”

“You gotta say it,” she stated flatly, still typing.

“Just to nab the terrorists,” Jax sighed, knowing better than to argue with her. “Not to hurt Fritz.”

The moment that Jax enunciated the last syllable, the projector realigned itself and cast a picture on the screen. Without the projector, only Jax’s glasses were now casting her hologram, which gave her a spectral, ghostly appearance. The picture on the screen was of a man who looked like an extra in the background of an old western.





“You know los Diablos Tejanos have no authority here,” the Nashville Electric Service manager scowled at the man in the big white Stetson and the cowboy boots with the revolver on his hip. “So you can get back on your horse and get the fuck out of here and back to your own state.”

“I’m with the FBI, sir,” Creed explained as he showed the manager the card that identified him as an specialist contractor. “And I’ll thank you not to use such language. Now would you kindly explain to me what happened here?”

The manager tried to grab Creed’s card, but he pulled it away.

“Let me see,” the manager said as he bent over to read the card. He pulled out a pad of paper and a pen and copied out the number. “What do you think happened here?”

Creed looked up at the mechanical linkages overhead that were no longer linked up, each of which had a dedicated crew fussing over as they scrambled to get the power back on.

“I think something tripped the transformer disconnect.”

“What do you need me for, then?” The manager sneered as he put away his pad and pencil.

“I need you to tell me why it tripped.”

“Power surge.”

“What caused the power surge?”

“How the fuck should I know? Isn’t that your job?”

Creed tucked his card back into his wallet and put his wallet back into the back pocket of his jeans. Noticing a smudge on the brass tip of his rattlesnake boots, he lifted one foot and wiped it on the back of his other leg. He then inspected it and repeated the whole process until he was satisfied.

“We done here?”

“I already thanked you not to use such language, sir. Now I’m telling you,” Creed reached into the breast pocket of his black-embroidered red shirt and pulled out the toothpick he’d kept there since he quit smoking. He stuck it into his mouth and rolled it around while drawing a slow breath, summoning up the patience to deal with this man. “Keep it up and let’s see what comes next.”

The manager stood firm, but said nothing.

“What kinds of things…” Creed started, but was interrupted by the sound of a gate opening behind him, which drew the manager’s attention. When it looked like the manager was going to yell something, Creed whipped out his hand and grabbed him by his greasy t-shirt before dragging him bodily across the distance between them, until they were nose-to-nose. “No, sir, eyes on me. What kinds of things could cause a power outage like that?”

“Solar flares, EMP, a power plant coming online unexpectedly…” The manager stammered as he grabbed weakly at Creed’s hand and tried to pry apart his fingers. “You can’t do this…he can’t be here…”

“Who?” Creed asked and looked over his shoulder just in time to see a bike courier with a phone in one hand and a manilla envelope in the other.

“Special Agent Creed Garza?” The courier asked, looking at his phone.

“That’s me.”

“Sign here,” the courier said as he held out his phone, which briefly displayed his name and the coordinates of the transformer station where they were standing, before switching to a blank screen with a black line at the bottom.

Creed used his free hand to grab the manager’s pen from his pocket, and signed the screen. The courier’s eyes went wide.

“You’re supposed to use your finger,” he whined as he handed over the envelope and desperately tried to wipe the pen ink off his phone.

“He can’t be here!” The manager yelled into Creed’s ear, but when Creed turned to look at him, he pulled away as far as he could while Creed still held his shirt.

Using his teeth, Creed tore the envelope open and looked inside. When he saw the FBI seal on a couple stacks of paper and an old flip-phone, he knew it was serious and finally let the manager go so he could pull out the documents.

“Indefinite suspension?” Creed muttered as he skimmed the first stack of paper. “Paid leave of absence?”

“Ha,” the manager guffawed. “Then you can’t be here either.”

“I’m supposed to take your ID card,” the courier said, still standing behind Creed and now holding open an empty envelope. Creed was in no hurry to respond to either of them, but when he was sure everything was official, he pulled out his identification card and tossed it into the envelope. The courier sealed it and started walking away.

The manager started yelling something, but Creed wasn’t listening. In the span of a few moments, his life had taken a sudden and unexpected turn. He turned to the second stack of papers and started reading what looked like a job offer that included terms like “extrajudicial authority,” none of which made any sense.

Then, the flip phone started ringing. He opened it and pressed the green “accept call” button.

“Hello?”

“Special Agent Garza? My name is Jax. I understand you are investigating the Nashville outage. Is that correct?”

“I was,” Creed shrugged. “Up until you fired me.”

“I didn’t fire you, Mr. Garza. The FBI put you on leave so you could work for me.”

“Same difference.”

“I know who is responsible for the outage. They’re on the shoulder of I-65 just north of the city. I need you to apprehend them and bring them to me for questioning.”

“Shoulda led with that,” Creed said and ran out the gate of the transformer station and threw the papers into the saddlebags of his vintage Harley Davidson WLC. He threw one leg over the bike and was about to kick start it when he noticed a smudge on the gas can that he quickly wiped off so he could see the painting of the white mustang. “Who are you anyway?”

“That’s need to know, Mr. Garza.”

“I’m en route,” he said as he kicked the old stallion to life and tore down the dirt road back towards civilization. “And call me Creed. But it’s adios for now while I verify these credentials.”

“I’d expect nothing less, Creed,” Jax said with a smile as his jet started to descend towards the hopelessly short runway of John C. Tune airport. “Just get them.”

“You can count on that, sir.”
 
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I know a place​

It seemed that the crazy bus didn’t have a destination or an end in sight. Vera thought back to the night she had received her first message from Calvin asking her to investigate. Apparently he’d seen a posting on a forum for PIs, and after doing some digging had decided that she was the best fit. Though it had never been revealed if it was her military background or time in the secret service that had cinched the decision.

Regardless she had an inkling that she wished he had kept on scrolling. After weeks in the nutty commune up in the mountains, culminating in the ‘conference’, to whatever had happened after, and now this. Talk of sacrifices and the river Styx. It was all a bit much, but then again she had seen a man vanish, a man come back from the dead, and she had a glowing woman in the backseat. Where the fuck was Calvin?

“I’m glad you’re feeling better, Brennan.” The amount of blood still coating the man still caused Vera’s stomach to twist and a woman who’d seen less would have likely been in hysterics. Though her brain was still grasping at straws for a logical explanation to all the nonsense. None came to mind, but she did have to agree with Fritz that those hunting them would be on their tracks soon. A few hadn’t been happy to see her take Lexi and a couple had tried to grab Vera. Though that epicenter had been a modge podge of blinding light, blood, electricity, and chaos.

“Let me be clear. I don’t like any of this, I don’t trust either of you, and I want to bottom of all of this. Starting with where Calvin vanished to. However, my top priority is tending to the woman in the backseat of this car, but if either of you try anything I will put you into the ground.” Which would be hard considering her gun had been lost in the fray, but she had other means. Vera cast a glance one last time around the old road searching for Calvin, but nothing was there. One last glance at Lexi before pulling herself into the red car and pulling the seat forward.

The car was chugging now and a knock had developed that wasn’t there before. The radio was garbled static and the old cassette player in the dash flickered until Vera turned the volume down. While she waited she pulled the flash light from the glove box along with the old school map and followed the patchwork of lines to a circled marker on the side of a mountain. Brennen crossed the faint light to climb into the jeep, the car groaned and grinded as Vera forced it into first gear.

Calvin had made the entire process seem as smooth as butter but as she urged the car forward each gear ground. The engine sputtered and smoke boiled out like a screen onto the jeep behind them. “Come on baby,” Vera patted the dash like it was an old cat. Eventually she managed to get it into fourth and bounced at an uncomfortable thirty five mile an hour speed that made the car sound like pieces were going to fall off.

The trek up the mountain was harrowing with hairpin turns, sheer drops off, and the car sputtering a tune that sounded dangerously close to ‘I think I can’. Not a single light pierced the tightly woven canopy of pines, oaks, and birches. Somewhere in the darkness coyotes and owls called out. Further into the forest they sped owls began to dot the trees and the vehicle was filled with the shimmering glow of the woman in the back. Vera remembered Calvins instructions.

“Old mine road, watch the odometer. Two miles, then a right, another three quarters and a left. Pull off on the right. Half a mile trek up.” By the time she passed Old mine road the road had become dirt and gravel with more pock marks than a teenager and treks in the dirt that scraped at the bottom of the cart. It reminded Vera of being back overseas with the escorts chugging into forbidden places. Her eyes darted from the road to the odometers as her knuckles turned white from the grip. Sweat soaked her back when the ‘pull off’ came into view. The pull off was a crescent shape with no guard that hung off the edge of the mountain. The car gave a mighty gasp and sputtered as Vera turned the ignition and put on the emergency break.

The owls continued to gather in the branches around them as Vera waited for her fellow travelers to join her. When she opened the back door to figure out how she was going to carry Lexi, two of the owls moved to the roof and craned their heads with knowing eyes. Vera tried to shoo them away but they simply flapped their wings wide and side stepped on the roof.



"Alright Sammy. You're in the home stretch. Just need you to bear with me for a few…more…seconds."

The muttered words were meant to provide comfort though since they fell on deaf ears became a pep talk of sorts. Not that the doctor, occasionally a surgeon, was in need of such a thing. Cole was brilliant. He knew it. The current hospital he worked at knew it. He was the one responsible for humans discovering the medicinal properties of gunpowder. The concept was a bit outdated, but he had still made his mark in the annals of history in a never going to properly receive recognition sort of way. Not that he was bitter. It didn't matter that the gods of old were still taught in classrooms and had monuments that continued to draw millions of visitors a year. What was the point of all of that when they weren't around to enjoy the reverence?

His hands were steady and his focus unwavering. A faint hum acted as the only distraction. Once the rib was removed the surgery would be considered a success. It had been a long and tedious process keeping the patient who was undoubtedly a modern medical miracle alive, but he had done it. The forceps clamped around the pesky bone, and just as he carefully started the extraction process-

BOOM.

The very ground shook as shrapnel rained down from the sky onto the formerly perfect sand. The explosion drowned out the sound of the buzzer when the tiny tweezers Cole held touched the edge of the spare rib box, but he knew from the way his half filled margarita tipped over he had clearly lost the game courtesy of the other reason his contributions were buried: his dearest sister, Zuri.

Robert Frost spoke of the road less traveled which described Cole and Zuri. Humanity had the choice between walking the path of healing or war, and Zuri's was the hand they took. From her came the hand cannons, assault rifles, and all of the inventions in between. Yet when her destruction burned the flesh from their skin, it was his gunpowder they turned to for skin grafts. Perhaps rather than a diverging path, they were symbiotic, but it wasn't the time for deep introspection.

"Wooooooooo!" The feminine whoop of absolute joy caused Cole's eyes to close as he counted slowly to three during which gave Zuri time to flop down beside him on the blanket.

"Zuri, If I had known you were going to blow up everything in sight, I'd have left you home."

"Cole, If I had known you were going to play board games all day, I would have stayed home."

"It's not a game. It's a dexterity exercise." Cole countered, but blackened fingertips plucked the tweezers from his hand and intentionally touched the border. "Shut up Ms. Spends All Her Free Time Playing Laser Tag." With his mood thoroughly ruined, he didn't even care when she began haphazardly throwing the pieces back into the plastic body. Instead he pulled his phone from his swim shorts and his brow furrowed when he saw the barrage of messages and breaking news. "City-wide power outage in Nashville." He read aloud.

Zuri shrugged as she worked on removing the funny bone from Sam. "Do…we care? We are literally in paradise right now. That's a them problem."

He continued scrolling until he saw a notification that gave him pause. It was a transcribed message from a police radio app that only a select few had access. "I think we do care." He muttered before he blocked her view of the board by holding the phone directly in front of her face.

Brothers we have problems.

"Well that's sexist. Calvin, Jax, or Fritz? Probably Jax. He enjoys having half naked women running around."

"You're a half naked woman running around." He pointed out, motioning vaguely to the black two piece swimsuit she wore.

"And you embezzled thousands of dollars to rent your own private beach because you weren't invited to the pool party. Want to keep throwing stones? I can do this all day." She countered with an arch of her brow, practically daring him to continue challenging her to their war of words.

"And I can do it better. I'm just choosing not to because I have a feeling it's about to be us versus them." To solidify their temporary truce, Cole held out his hand once he was on his feet to help her stand.

"Well, isn't it always? Question is, what problems WE could have." For Zuri to say the matter was a question, it was spoken more like a statement because they both knew there was only one topic that all of them would have a universal interest in. "Nashville or...?"

"Nashville. I think the or will come to us."

"Well, fuck." She hated when the or came to visit.





Creed’s stallion rolled to a stop on the shoulder of I-65 as he kicked out the stand and killed the engine. There were some subtle traces that someone had pulled over, including tire tracks and oil drips from at least two engines, but the most obvious clue was the pool of blood and streaks down the road where someone or something was run over and dragged. Creed unmounted his bike and walked around, careful not to disturb anything as he reconstructed the scene in his mind.

Bloody footprints led from a pool of blood where the body had laid bleeding for some time. They couldn’t belong to whatever was bleeding, as it or they had surely died from blood loss. Creed pictured the suspects – Vera, Lexi, and Fritz as Jax had informed him – running over a deer, then stopping to collect the carcass before continuing on. Not a bad idea to stock up on venison if they were planning on laying low for a while. The footprints were not too different from Creed’s own, so he concluded they must belong to the man of the group, Fritz.

Unfortunately, he didn’t see many clues as to where they were going. After walking back to his bike, he pulled the stack of papers with his new assignment out of his saddlebags and flicked a switch to turn his headlight on so he could skim through the sea of legalese. Officially he was now working under the authority of the DoD, as a civilian contractor to the NSA, and he was under the supervision of special agent David G. Talbot, but reported to civilian liaison Jax Nova.

Given that Jax seemed to have some intel on the suspects’ location, his first thought was that he could call him back and ask for more. But Creed felt like he couldn’t fully trust Jax, and also it would reflect poorly on him if he didn’t take some initiative of his own. Flipping open his new phone, he was about to dial the number of an old friend, but much to his surprise he saw that he was already on a call.

He was sure it hadn’t rung and he hadn’t accepted the call, but he lifted the phone to his ear anyway.

“Hello? Talbot?” Creed was quiet for a moment while the man who was ostensibly his new supervisor rattled off his authorization code. Creed double-checked it against the papers in front of him and it was legit. “Someone stopped here. If it was them, they left not long ago.”

Creed listened again. Whoever Talbot was, he was extremely well-informed.

“Some friend-of-a-friend’s cabin, or one of Fritz’s safehouses? I know which one I’d go to.”






Tally pulled her phone away from her ear and went back to typing on it.

“Do I have your attention again, Tally?” Jax asked, visibly annoyed. He’d been staring at her for the last 5 minutes while she seemed to take a phone call, but no sounds came out of her mouth when she talked, and he couldn’t hear who was on the other side of the conversation.

“You have more than you deserve.”

“Why do you have to be so dramatic?”

“Baby, I was born this way.”

“Okay, well,” Jax gestured in the direction of the airport towards which they were rapidly descending. “We’re going to set up portable generators and cell towers…”

Tally didn’t exactly multitask so much as she flitted around doing several things in rapid succession. While she remained physically present, or at least as physical as she ever was, as soon as Jax started droning on, she zipped around the internet to her other personas. Taliesin Byrne from Cork was editing together a short video where he visited an Irish castle. Tari Fukui was shooting a TikTok in a Kyushu yatai, munching on oden and getting drunk on Suntory Premium with a group of total strangers.

But her attention kept coming back to Digi Tally, the girl from Louisiana (south of the I-10, naturally) who was living the Cali lifestyle while still managing to appear down to earth, even as her adoring fans watched her fly into Nashville’s other airport on a freaking Concorde. All the networks were abuzz with how she’d talked some lame old tech bro into helping the best city in Tennessee (suck it Memphis) get back on its feet after a natural disaster. Most importantly of all, hundreds of her fans were streaming the landing from their phones, which let her project a holographic pink sheen on the plane so it didn’t seem like the dull gray it actually was.

“...so that’s why we need the media to cover everything here, because it’s not worth doing anything if we can’t be seen doing it.”

“Okay, boomer,” Tally replied, still darting in and out of her other personas in the spaces between her words. “Let me start a group chat with Melato-NBC and Fox Snooze and maybe those dinosaurs will wake up from their old people naps before we’re done here.”

“You’re older than I am,” Jax shot back as the plane slammed against the very tip of the runway and the engines started howling as the pilot threw them into full reverse thrust.. “And in charge of PR.”

“That’s public relations, not press relations,” Tally rolled her eyes without looking up from her phone as she apparated behind the attendant as she unsealed the cabin door and pulled it open to reveal hundreds of screaming fans and flashing lights on the runway. “You’re welcome in advance for giving you something better than you asked for.”

Tally stepped into the lights, which fully resolved her holographic body into ultra high-definition. “Social media is better than old media.”






Rolling up to a cabin at the end of a dirt road with a couple of cars out front, Creed pressed the clutch with his boot, cut the ignition, and reached down to shift into first just as the front wheel hit a particularly big rock and his stallion bucked him clean over his handlebars. Creed hit the ground hard and tumbled forward, losing his hat somewhere along the way, finally ending up on his ass in a cloud of debris. If anyone was inside, they weren’t in a hurry to announce themselves while he stood up, grabbed his hat, whacked it against his leg a few times, then put it on.

A cursory inspection around the perimeter revealed that it was a simple log cabin that was starting to fall into disrepair. Any view inside through the small windows was obscured by thick curtains that almost looked like repurposed wool blankets that had seen better days. The curtains only left enough of a gap to see that there was flickering light inside. A thick plume of smoke billowed from the chimney, and Creed couldn’t be sure in the moonless darkness, but it almost seemed to have a blue tint to it.

With his right hand hovering over the revolver on his hip, Creed reached out and slowly pushed open the front door.






The cabin was roughly divided into quarters, but only one quarter was sectioned off into a private room whose interior was visible through an open doorway. It appeared to be a cozy bedroom, with blankets and pillows piled high on the approximately queen-sized bed.

Next to the bedroom on the far right side of the cabin was the kitchen quarter. There was a sink with a faucet, but due to the probably lack of plumbing was likely connected to a small water tank under the counter. There was no fridge, but there was a chest-sized cooler that could probably keep cold things cold for a weekend at least, across from which there was an old, but well cared-for gas stove hooked up to a propane canister, suitable for making cold things hot.

To the right just inside the door there was the dining quarter containing a wooden table with barely enough space for each of 4 people to eat sitting in the chairs next to it, provided nobody needed to put their elbows on the table.

Finally, to the left there was a living area with two couches upholstered in some ancient fabric that had little red sports cars embroidered into it. The couches were at right angles to each other, gathered around an old cast-iron wood stove next to a ceiling-high pile of split logs.

“I could get used to a place like this,” Fritz announced and looked at the others with a joyous expression as he happily puffed sweet-smelling smoke that snaked its way through the air from his freshly-lit pipe. “You should see the places I normally stay.”






It wasn’t a cabin, it was some kind of church, Creed realized only after he opened the door. Inside, there were rows of pews that were simply logs that had been roughly-hewn into the shape of benches. A handful of people were sitting on the benches, some of whom turned to look at him as he entered. There was also a nearly-bald man standing on a raised platform like a preacher at the far-end of the room in brown robes adorned only with a rope tied loosely around his waist. He was speaking, but Creed couldn’t hear the words because there was a line of people, two abreast, shuffling slowly down the center aisle of the room towards where the preacher was. They were chanting as they walked forward, but they were wholly without rhythm or tone. Creed couldn’t see what they were doing, but whatever it was, they finished quickly and then took seats on the benches.

A young girl of likely no more than 12 years continued to stare at him. She was wearing hand-made clothes sewn together from simple patterned cloth and must have been one of the first to do whatever they did, since she had sat down before he arrived. Suddenly, she stood and walked over to stand just inside the doorway before curtsying.

“Won’t you come in and join our communion, mister?”

“Not sure I was invited,” Creed replied hesitantly.

“Everyone is, mister,” she said and took his hand. She weighed nothing and he could have easily pulled away, but he allowed himself to be pulled to the back of the line. “Everyone is welcome here as long as you make the sacrifice your first time.”

“Sacrifice?”

“Weren’t hard for me and mine,” she beamed. “Never had much to begin with, on account o’ being destitute. Pa says that sacrifice must be commensurate with what you’ve got. I reckon you’ll have to sacrifice a lot, mister.”

“Is that your pa?” Creed gestured to the preacher.

“He’s everyone’s pa,” she nodded. “Everyone here at least. He’s your pa now too.”

“Do you worship him?”

“No, silly,” she giggled. “He just tells us what we oughta worship.”

“That being…?”

“Simple stuff,” she seemed to think about the question. “Growing food, hunting, bringing in buckets of water, telling stories around the fire.”

“Sounds nice,” Creed admitted.

“It is,” she beamed. “It’s almost your turn. What’s your name mister?”

“Creed.”

“That’s an old name,” she giggled again. “I’m Elba.”

“Nice to meet you, Elba.”

Nobody spoke for a moment and Creed tried to peer through the chanting crowd ahead of him to see what kind of sacrifice he’d have to make.

“I wanted to know your name on account of I won’t see you again if you can’t make your sacrifice.”

“What happens to those people?”

“I dunno,” she said blankly. “But I never see them again. I’m going to sit down now. Good luck!”

Elba slipped away and went back to sit with a small group of similarly-clothed people Creed assumed were her family. They looked at him and smiled slightly, bowing their heads in unison.

Creed looked away and only then started to regret the decision he’d made. This wasn’t a safehouse. It was some kind of cult.

Suddenly, the phone in his pocket buzzed. After taking a moment to catch his breath, he flipped it open and pressed it to his ear.

“Don’t speak,” it was Talbot’s voice. “They’ll make you destroy this phone if they realize you have it. The man in front of you has a phone in the left front pocket of his pants. Take it from him.”

Creed looked at the man, who was wearing brown cotton overalls and what might have once been a white shirt that had stained yellow over time with sweat.

“I can’t help but think I’ll be putting him in danger.”

“Be quiet, they’ll hear you,” Talbot replied before continuing. “You don’t know what will happen, she just said that she doesn’t see them again.”

“You were listening?”

The man ahead of him turned and Creed quickly palmed the phone and started tunelessly chanting the first things that came to mind, which were the names of the Cowboys’ offensive line. The man ahead of him gave him a slow nod before turning back around.

“You’ll find that I’m always listening,” Talbot explained. “And watching. The leader isn’t armed, but the two men closest to him have pistols under their left arms.”

“I know,” Creed whispered as angrily as he could without being too loud. “Who cares about phones?”

“These people do, I can assure you,” Talbot said. “They’re Fritz’s people. Time’s running out.”

Creed heard the line go dead and he snapped the phone shut and stuffed it down his pants. He could see the front now, between the shoulders of the men in front of him. There was a fire pit full of white-hot coals into which people were throwing phones and laptops and smart watches and other electronics. As they burned, they emitted a dark blue smoke that was caught in a giant fume hood and being funneled up into the chimney he’d seen from outside.

“Forgive me father, for I am about to sin,” Creed muttered and darted his hand into the man’s pocket and pulled out his phone just before the man reached to get it. Feeling his empty pocket, the man hesitated and Creed stepped forward to throw the phone into the pit and give the preacher a nod before going to sit down at the first open seat on a bench.

This left only the man in the overalls standing at the front of the room, patting himself down with a look of increasing panic.

“Brother Michael, have you forgotten your sacrifice?” The preacher spoke, his words cutting through the murmur and causing it to die down. Suddenly, the room was silent and all eyes were on Brother Michael.

“I don’t understand, Father,” Michael pleaded. “I just had it. I swear I had it. It was a good phone. A smart phone. I took it off a suit when he weren’t looking.”

“Sister Margaret, I’m afraid that will be all for our young ones today,” the preacher said as he gave the woman nearest to Elba a nod. Margaret stood and gathered up all the children and led them out a side door. The church was silent until they were gone, except for Michael trying desperately to find a friendly face in the crowd.

“We gather here each night to commune with our lord through the holy blue smoke trapped within all sinful technology,” the preacher explained as several men stood and started slowly padding towards Michael. “But communion requires sacrifice. You know this. We all know this. Even our newest brother knows this.”

Creed felt his stomach lurch as the preacher gestured at him. He really didn’t like where this was going.

“But you also know that there are other ways to offer a sacrifice,” the men lunged forward and lifted Michael by his arms and legs and carried him towards the fire pit. He was screaming now. “We all thank you for your holiest of sacrifices. You shall be the first among us to stand with Him in His field.”

“Stop,” Creed yelled and there was something in his voice that made them. He stood and stepped out into the aisle and started walking towards the front. “Put him down.”

“That’s what they intend to do,” the preacher said and gave them a nod. But the men hesitated, caught between the dueling authorities of the preacher and this unknown man.

“Put him down outside the fire pit,” Creed elaborated. “He and I will leave and we’ll never darken your door again.”

Creed was calmer now. While it had been the first time he’d joined a cult, stolen someone’s phone, and condemned an innocent to death in the pursuit of justice, Creed had been to more than his fair share of showdowns. He walked with an unusual asymmetry as he kept his right hand close to his pistol. His whole right side was stiff and coiled, ready to strike. His left side had to make up for it by being more loose and flexible, ready to steady himself against a bench or fend off someone lunging at him.

Still, the men hesitated. Michael squirmed in their grasp, his face close enough to the fire pit to feel the heat washing over his skin. But they held firm and looked back at the cowboy, studying him as he stepped closer, before turning to the preacher, whose eyes were fixed on the man interrupting their holy communion. When the men looked at the preacher’s enforcers, the tension in the air snapped.

The enforcers jumped to their feet and threw open their jackets, reaching in to grab at the guns in their underarm holders. But where they had to throw their hand inwards, then pull out to shoot, Creed’s hand swung forward like a clock’s pendulum and in one smooth motion, grabbed his revolver, lifted it free, leveled it, and pulled the trigger to fire from his hip. The first enforcer went down before he could draw, but the second had precious moments as Creed’s left hand snapped down to pull back the hammer so he could fire the old single-action again. The second enforcer had his gun fully out and swung it in a narrow arc, squeezing on the trigger before he’d even finished aiming.

After the second shot rang out, a fistful of seconds passed in agonizing silence during which nobody was sure who’d fired, before the second enforcer slumped over. Lowering his gun, Creed kept his eyes on the preacher for a moment longer before turning his gaze to the men, who dropped Michael safely just this side of the fire pit. He scrambled up and back until he was cowering behind Creed.

Everyone was on their feet now, eyes on Creed as he backed up towards the door. That’s when he started to second guess himself. Did anyone else have a gun and was just waiting for him to turn his back? Were there more crazy folk out in the woods who’d heard the shots and were closing in on him? Hell, maybe even Sister Margaret and the kids were racing back to take a last stand against him. After all, who knows what they taught those kids.

“Michael and I would like to thank y’all for your hospitality,” Creed said as they stepped over the threshold and into the cool night air. “We’ll be going now.”

Creed felt the back of his rattlesnake boot touch the front wheel of his bike and he stopped. “Michael, be a dear and stand up my bike. It gave me a hell of a buck on the way in, but I expect it’s no worse for wear than I am.”

Behind him, the comparatively large man struggled but ultimately succeeded in standing up the bike. The light from inside the church flowed out onto both of them and the bike, and Creed could still see dozens of eyes inside staring at him, and who knows how many more from the darkness. With his left hand, he grabbed the handlebars.

“Get on the back,” Creed said and waited impatiently for the big man to figure out how to mount a motorcycle. Once done, he threw his own leg over the gas can and pressed down the clutch.

“As long as you stick to sacrificing home electronics, you won’t have to worry about seeing me again,” he said before kickstarting his stallion to life. He held down the front brake with his gun hand and shifted into second, dropping the clutch and letting it kick up a cloud of dirt as he spun around and hightailed it with Michael holding on for dear life.

The telltale whip crack of bullets flying past his ears were the only goodbye the cultists sent their way, though Creed couldn’t shake the feeling that they held more of a “see you soon” kind of message as he plotted the route to the cabin that special agent D.G. Talbot had told him about.








“You jeopardized everything for the sake of some yokel. I’m beginning to worry you weren’t the right man for this assignment,” Talbot’s deep voice grumbled over the poor connection to Creed’s cheap flip phone. Creed stood by the side of his bike bathed in the floodlights of the 24/7 gas station, one hand on the gas nozzle filling up, the other holding a book of maps of Tennessee, his fingers propping it open to the location of Vera’s friend’s cabin, which seemed to be in the middle of a forest with no connecting roads. He held the phone to his ear with one shoulder. “We need someone committed enough to see this through to the end.”

“Can’t let an innocent man die,” Creed growled back as he tried to decide the best approach to the cabin if it meant going off road.

“The power outage knocked out all the hospitals in the city and their backup generators; hundreds have died already,” Talbot shot back.

“Feel free to come down and lend a hand.”

“That’s literally impossible,” Talbot groaned.

“Then get off my ass,” Creed mumbled, his words slurred as he focused on pathfinding. “Or take me off the case.”

“You can stay on it for now,” Talbot relented. “If Fritz were there, he would have been leading the ceremonies. And you wouldn’t have left alive.”

“So you knew from the moment I stepped inside,” Creed groaned.







“We had to be sure,” Tally said, sitting in the back of the ugly black SUV watching through the tinted windows as Jax stood outside shaking hands with the Mayor and Police Commissioner before stepping inside to join her and Avery. The outrageously heavy beast of an armored vehicle carried an engine with enough horsepower to tow a tank, all of which it used as it roared to life and pulled away along with an identical vehicle ahead and behind. A squadron of police motorbikes fell into formation ahead and behind with their lights flashing to part the seas of traffic.

“You on the phone with Creed?” Jax asked. “Congratulate him on clearing Fritz’s safehouse. Now we can go clean it up without Fritz getting in the way.”

Tally hung up her phone, shot Jax a look he couldn’t interpret, and then resumed her texting.

“First, I want to send him a message,” Jax said. “Who was it who ran ops on the last job Fritz pulled here?”

Before he was done speaking, a hologram shot from Jax’s glasses and filled the space between them and Avery with a man’s face slowly rotating.

“The Regent of Tennessee,” Tally explained, then switched the image to a diagram of interconnected sewer, stormwater, and steam tunnels at the center of which was a huge underground chamber. “Rules from beneath the streets. Splits his time between Nashville and Memphis.”

“He looks like a hobo and I bet he smells like one,” Jax said, turning up his nose. “How does he get messages between Jax and his contacts?”

“We think he uses physical notes and a network of street people and animals.”

“Ugh,” Jax groaned and then started waving his hand around his glasses frantically. Whenever his fingers passed in front of the holographic projector, both the diagram and Tally briefly disappeared. “Send the details to the brass while I get him on a Zoom call.”

“Don’t even try. You’re an idiot,” Tally said as she rolled her eyes and then an image of someone in uniform replaced the diagram.

“Yes?” They asked. Their voice was obscured, which also prevented their face from resolving even with Jax working his tech magic. Four stars jingled on their epaulets as they spoke.

“We need an attack plan on this location. Three SUVs and two squads. Minimal casualties.”

“Done,” the voice replied. The figure moved their hands and Tally projected the diagram again, now showing a route through the tunnels into the central chamber and then out by a different route. “But I recommend you let me send in some bots. One should be enough, two would be plenty.”

“No,” Jax shook his head. “I want them to see me do it.”







“Did you get the names I sent you?” Creed asked into the phone which he’d tucked into the brim of his hat to hold it as he raced up a series of mountain switchbacks.

“Wasn’t meant to be funny. Obviously he’s not that old. No, I haven’t seen a picture, but that would be some kind of record. Maybe it’s some kind of title that gets passed down. What about the other names? Vera? Military? Secret service? Uh-huh. Lexi? Gotcha. Thanks, hoss.”

Creed rolled to a stop at the apex of a hairpin and pulled the phone out of his hat. With a few grunts of confusion, he switched on a small flashlight and pulled the book of maps out of his saddlebags.

“Was I supposed to turn off back there?”







“We’re not going in there,” the captain of the escort radioed in.

“No problem, my assistant will let you know where to meet us when we come out.”

“I’m NOT your assistant,” Tally snapped.

“IF you come out,” the captain replied.

“We’ll be fine,” Jax replied just as they turned the convoy down a maintenance road and the escort peeled off. The lead SUV switched on a set of offroading LED strips that lit up the culvert entrance like daylight. There were a few groups of raggedy-looking street people who looked up as the vehicles charged and they reacted fast, drawing guns and opening fire on the convoy. But the bullets ricocheted harmlessly off the heavy armor and the cars shot into the tunnel without any issues.

All but one of them converged at the entrance of the tunnel to keep firing on their rear. But one person dropped their gun and started pulling on a cable that ran along the side of the tunnel. Jax watched the cable go taut and slack and ahead of them some great bell started to ring.

Pockets of resistance alternated opening fire on the convoy and putting up barricades, but neither was any more effective than the exterior guards and before long they emerged into a cathedral-like chamber in which thousands of gas torches burned from alcoves all the way up the walls and even up the vaulted ceiling. A series of grates were barely visible far above, and Jax wondered if they normally would have let street lights cast orange rays into the empty space around them, if it weren’t for the ongoing blackout.

At the center of the room there was a throne that sat atop a mountain of chrome-plated junk that glittered in the torchlight. On the throne sat a man wearing a shiny suit covered in sequins and a pair of oversized sunglasses. His black hair was slicked back with grease.

More flashes of gunfire erupted all around them, along with some rocket-propelled grenades blasting the ground nearby, but nothing even so much as slowed them down. The convoy pulled up in front of the junk pile and under heavy fire, the SUV’s roofs opened up and out flew 3 squadrons of drones. As soon as they were airborne, they lit up the air with laser fire. Their networked sensors plotted the trajectory of every bullet along with an intercept solution fast enough to incinerate the bullets before they made it much farther than the barrels they were fired from.

Jax stepped out into the ozone, lead, and gunpowder-filled air and visibly enjoyed himself as he stood in the thunderous din, before the Regent on the throne raised an arm and the gunfire abruptly finished, leaving only the buzzing sound of the drones hovering and waiting for the firefight to resume.

“Who are you?” The Regent said in a molasses-thick drawl.

“I’m Jax Nova, CEO of Novatech,” he replied smugly. “How do you like my drones? This is defense mode. Kinda like the Iron Dome. Ever seen videos of that? Great stuff. Offense mode would wipe out all your people in a few seconds, so let’s maybe hold off on that for now.”

“What do you want?”

“I want you to come with me, see some things, and then I’ll bring you back here and you can tell Fritz about it.”

“I haven’t spoken to Fritz in years.”

“Wonderful! I love being a facilitator to rekindle old connections.”

“If I refuse?”

“My drones will kill everyone in this room except you, and I’ll take you anyway.”

“If I refuse to tell Fritz?”

“You’ll want to, for his sake.”

“Fine.”

The old man in the outrageous costume stood up and climbed down as hundreds of eyes watched from the shadows as their leader surrendered, taken from the middle of their stronghold by someone they hadn’t heard of, for the sake of someone only some of them half-remembered before today. But as the cars rolled away as abruptly as they’d arrived, nobody would forget those names again.

“How's our bloodhound doing?” Jax asked as the Regent sat down across from him, next to Tally.

“He’ll be arriving at their cabin any minute now,” Tally bluffed as she looked in her mind’s eye at the scribble of lines that showed Creed’s desperate attempts to find any road leading even remotely in the right direction. “Do we need another attack plan for Ftiz’s safehouse?”

“Nah, let the goons handle it,” Jax shrugged. “That’s what they’re for.”







Creed frowned as he held his finger down on where he thought he was on the map, but then looked up to see the road disappear down an old abandoned mine shaft.

“This can’t be right,” he groaned before turning the bike around and thundering back up the road he’d just come down.







“Love your last single,” Tally mentioned without looking up from her phone. Outside, a team of goons dressed in SWAT gear erupted from the cars ahead and behind them while the police willfully looked the other way down at the end of the road that led up to Fritz’s church.

The Regent turned to look at the holographic young woman sitting next to him and blinked. A hail storm of bullets plinked against the window when the goons breached the church.

“Thanks,” he replied, clearly confused. “Digi Tally?”

“That’s me,” she beamed holographically. Outside a small explosion went off, probably a grenade. The shockwave shook the car gently.

“Then I loved yours too,” the Regent admitted. “Though it was a bit suggestive for my taste.”

“Being suggestive was the point,” Tally laughed. The fight outside died down and one of the goons came to knock on the window.

“Show time,” Jax said with a smile as he opened the door and stepped out into the cool night air. The Regent reluctantly followed and was greeted by the sight of Jax walking, an old man in simple robes kneeling, and a squad of mercenaries standing at the ready, all silhouetted by the wood cabin behind them quickly going up in flames.

“Regent, please meet Fritz’s local cult leader.”

The old man in the robes rocked back and forth on his knees, chanting some kind of mantra repeatedly.

“Padre, please confirm your identity for the benefit of the Regent, who’ll be relaying all this to Fritz.”

“I don’t know what you’re trying to prove, Jax,” the padre said. “You know Fritz will hit you back where it hurts and if you catch him, he’ll just jump to another body before you can lock him up.”

Jax sighed as he slipped a ring onto the thumb and index finger of his right hand. “I won’t ask again, Padre.”

“Yes, I’m the leader of Fritz’s church.”

“One of Fritz’s churches,” Jax sighed. “If only you were the only one, that would make things easier. But your kind tend to pop up like cockroaches. Say goodbye, Padre.”

Jax placed his ringed fingers on the old man’s temples. Electricity arced, lighting up the darkness, and the old man screamed momentarily before collapsing to the ground.

“We’re done here,” Jax told the goons, who quickly loaded themselves back onto the lead and tail cars in the convoy. “Regent, send a rat or whatever. Let Fritz know that as long as he’s with the people he’s with, we’ll wipe out anyone who helps him. Anyone who has ever helped him.”

Jax and the Regent got back into the middle car and the convoy took off again.

“Hell, we could probably even predict who would help Fritz with some accuracy.” Jax gave Tally a glance, but she didn’t look up from her phone. “But if he just gives them up, he and his ilk are free to go.”

“Do you really think he’ll take you up on that offer?”

“It’s Fritz,” Jax shrugged. “Who knows?”







“Why’s she glowing?” Fritz asked, his pipe bouncing precariously between his teeth as he carefully reached into the car and slipped his arms underneath the unconscious woman therein, trying not to touch the car as much as possible. When his hands touched her body, she glow brightened briefly. Fritz’s eyebrows shot up. “Oh. I see.”

A lifetime spent without even the smallest technological comfort had left Fritz’s host with more than enough strength to lift the woman without any obvious effort. Though he wasn’t exactly an adonis, as a predilection for consuming earthly delights left him with a healthy layer of fat around his hardened muscles, providing a soft cushion for Lexi’s sleeping form as he carried her up into the cabin and set her down gently onto the bed.







Fritz spent a few minutes checking under everything until he was sure there were no hidden trap doors into a cellar, before he exited the cabin and inspected the exterior. He stopped for a moment, puffed on his pipe, sipped at a mason jar of moonshine – newly acquired from his trunk – and tried to see whatever Brennan was yelling at before giving up and resuming his sweep. Lastly, he trudged out to the big barn that despite being quite old was in remarkably good shape.

Pulling the door open, he was greeted with utter darkness. “Hmm,” he muttered quietly before drinking all but the last drop of his drink. Carefully upending his pipe to let a single ember fall into his open container of nearly-pure ethanol. It caught quickly and a blue flame lit up the interior of the barn.

“Wow,” he marveled at the collection of car parts, tools, a lift strong enough to hoist a tank, and other toys he so desperately wanted to investigate, but otherwise moved quickly to assure himself that nobody was waiting in the rafters to drop down on them when they’d let their guard down. When he was satisfied, he paused for a moment to consider the contents of the barn.

“There’s no way,” he assured himself. “You’re just being paranoid.”

Then his makeshift lantern went out, so he closed up the barn and walked back to the house.

“If you’re quite finished yelling at the trees, Brennan,” Fritz used his pipe to gesture generally upwards. “I think we’d best have a chat.”

Fritz went inside and pulled some already-quartered logs from the pile and put them into the wood stove. He tore some dry birch bark off in strips and used it for kindling, again using embers from his pipe to light them. When the fire started to catch, he re-packed the bowl of his pipe and used a bit of bark that was only partially aflame to light up again, before sitting down on the far end of the couch with the best view of the front door.

“Hey Headlights, this pertains to you as well. Also your friend Sleeping Beauty, but I have a feeling she’s waiting for true love’s first kiss or somesuch, and I’m not likely to be the one for that.

“I know we’re all feeling a little apprehensive. Some of us because we can’t believe what’s going on,” Fritz gestured to Vera. “Others because we don’t yet understand what’s going on,” he gestured to Brennan. “And as for me, because some very powerful people would like nothing more than to lock me up and destroy the key.

“These powerful people are gods of technology. They…” Fritz paused and looked at Brennan. “Right, I need to remember to give the version of this talk with a minimum of technological details or recent references.”

Fritz took a moment to collect his thoughts, puffing quietly on his pipe and looking into his empty, slightly-charred mason jar longing between glances to the wood stove, inside of which the fire was starting to crackle.

“Their domains are anything with wheels, or communication via the written word, or weapons; surely those are concepts over which you have some grasp. The reason they’re after me is because I’m one of them, but my purpose is to remind people of the flaws and shortcomings of technology. In short, I am the god of technological mishaps and malfunctions. Which makes them scared of me, because that which gives them their power is powerless in my presence.

“I’m old enough to remember some of the old gods, but I don’t remember much from my infancy, when I was taking delight in making a chisel slip so that 10 goats turned into 10,000. My earliest useful memories were long after the old gods were in decline.”

Fritz pointed the stem of his pipe at Brennan. “I don’t know for sure, but everything you’ve said has led me to believe you’re one of the old Greeks. That was about 2500 years ago, when I would’ve been breaking compasses and making ships sink. Things have come a long way since then, which is what led to the decline of your people and the rise of mine.

“I wouldn’t normally tell anyone this, but when I picked up Sleeping Beauty, I could tell she was a god. No idea of what, but I’m guessing she’s old, like Brennan here. That being the case, the gods of technology will see you as a threat and come to lock you up. They can’t kill you. Not really. You’ll just jump to another suitable host, as long as there is someone. But they can imprison you and you could live forever in their care, far away from where you’ll have any influence, until you’re forgotten. Or you give up.

“So the time for apprehension has passed. We’re all in the same boat. It would behoove you to open up so we can work together. Especially you,” Fritz pointed his pipe at Vera. “We don’t even know your name, and you don’t seem to have any issues with modernity, so I’m not sure how you ended up involved in all of this.”
 
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Friends of my Enemies​

"You flatter me Morpheus, and I don't recall what you speak of. I feel like I have been here for a long time." Artemis couldn't recall much after the blood moon so long ago. Metal carriage?


"Tell me about this dream world in which you speak? How do I know that you're not trying to weave another tale?" Somewhere beyond her it felt like a spark, another crack in a dam that sundered the sky, and it pulled. That pulse was so familiar. "We also have the matter of where will you be when I wake?"


"It's you who flatters me if you think I am capable of weaving such a tell. This time I speak only the truth and what I suspect to be the truth." Morpheus took no offense to her questioning his integrity for it was wise to hesitate to trust one capable of manipulating dreams and nightmares. "Is it not obvious? I will be by your side whenever you awaken. I need not a physical form to exist though I cannot say we will be able to freely speak as we are now. Come, my friend." He offered her his arm to escort her towards the water's edge.


In no particular rush, he continued to voice his speculations during their short stroll. "It's curious. You recall nothing, yet I recall it all. You potentially have a body, yet I was not given the same grace. I am unsure if our differing circumstances were deliberate calculations or simply some sort of progression into competency. Perhaps I'm right that Pan was killed. It could be that they were unable to replicate the murder which left us all in various stages of purgatory." There was one who could provide all of their answers, but Morpheus was unsure if The All Knower would allow themselves to be found.


He brought their journey to an end when the still waters laid before them. "You are the goddess of the hunt and wild animals. Are you still able to see through their eyes?" He asked, his gaze drifting between her and what should have been their window into the human world. "I'd like for you to see what I have witnessed and to lay eyes on that girl. Two souls typically cannot occupy the same space at the same time, but her dreams led me to your domain. A novel situation, but I'm sure it means she is aware and accepting of your presence. The only question is if you are willing to do the same. Once the answer becomes yes, you will awaken." And if it was as he suspected, he would then be able to speak with Artemis's host


Artemis looped her arm through the god of dreams and found a fuzziness when she tried to recall the last mortal or god she had locked arms with. Something had called her to the sea or was it a hamlet by the sea, somewhere far from her home. A pressure sliced into her head when she tried to piece that time together. Rather than force it she returned her focus to the dark mysterious god next to her.

“Pan is dead?” It wasn’t impossible for the gods to be killed but it was certainly improbable. They weren’t the children of humans after all. Gray eyes peered out over the dark waters then to the mirage of forest that surrounded them. “My children suffer, their pain is almost unbearable. What has happened while we slept?” Tendrils of silver hair whipped as she snapped her head to look up at him. To peer into the dark pools that could pry even the deepest secrets of the heart.

“I have never been bound to a human,” Artemis looked back into the pool and witnessed the youth of a young blonde girl. Somehow Artemis knew her, she had loved to dance in the rain, and anything that could go faster than her legs. The brow furrowed as she tried to make sense of the roaring bits of metal, the carriages no longer had horses. Morpheus arm slipped from the bend in her arm and rested on the small of her back.

“You can do this, I’ll be with you.” Artemis felt herself tumbling towards the now turbulent waters. At the bottom something was there, she kicked and fought against the unfamiliar energy. It was erratic and wild like the autumn hunt. Outside her body glowed brightly and Lexi gasped. An hour later vibrant blue eyes shot open, the blonde hair a now silvered blue. Lexi clawed at the blanket and her head swiveled from side to side taking in wood walls. Four post bed with murals on the wall of scantily clad women draped over the metal beasts. One the window seal an owl tapped at the glass. Lexi pulled herself from the confines of the plush bed, and her legs folded as she tried to stand. A solid thump found her on the floor looking up at the window seal. “What the hell has happened?” Artemis could feel the withered poisoned forest around her.



Hermes should have been the one with the right to wonder. Yes, he spoke of the River Styx and stealing the sun, but Fritz spoke of sacrifices and domains. Sacrifices were only to be made in the names of the gods, and Fritz was no god. Nor did he have the right to a domain. At most he was a human hoping to elevate his status, but until he proved himself worthy, the words he spoke were blasphemy that his more volatile brethren would have promptly corrected. Under normal circumstances, Hermes would have found it amusing, but with all things considered, it was troubling. Thus, part of the reason Hermes chose to accompany Fritz in his carriage. While Vera had knowledge of the old gods, it was Fritz who seemed to know more than he let on and the expedition would give Hermes a chance to question Fritz. The other reason being Vera chose the carriage with the damning lights.


"I see no horses." He noted as Fritz took his seat, but apparently this Nashville had no need for such labor. The carriage was capable of moving on its own which was quite fascinating, and Hermes's hands trailed over the metal surface as he tried to make sense of how it was possible. The feeling of the breeze without the stench of horses reminded him of flying, but the pleasantness did not last for long. No matter the location, humans were foolish. The path they traveled was not made for carriages. As the patron of travelers, Hermes's presence alone protected Fritz, but Vera was out of his reach. Blue eyes glowed softly with the intent to cast his blessings, but suddenly an intense throbbing sensation shot through his head.


It grew more intense the further they traveled. His head dropped back against the seat when the lights from the carriage in front of them again became too bright leaving him no choice but to close his eyes. His throat grew sore making speaking impossible, and each bump in the road caused his stomach to churn. It deprived him of the prime opportunity to capitalize on their time together.


By the time they reached their destination, he practically fell from the carriage trying to get away. To his credit, he didn't land on the ground. Instead, he was hunched over with his hands on his knees breathing heavily, sweat dripping from his brow, while the others fussed with the woman in the car. "Zeus, forgive me." He muttered, prepared to humble himself and apologize for whatever wrong he had committed that banished him from Mt. Olympus. However, his penance had yet to be paid based on the owl that landed boldly on his back as though he had been reduced to a perch. "Be gone. It is not I who you seek." With no loyalty to wildlife, he forced himself to stand but the owl moved to his shoulder instead. "Or perhaps I am?" He questioned, confusion written on his face. Owls were not known to be fond of mortals. "Who sent you? Athena?" No, his half sister's preference was the little owl while the one perched on his shoulder was a larger, brown tinted breed he didn't recognize.


Yellow eyes blinked individually during their impromptu staredown, and its talons dug into Hermes's skin when he shrugged in another attempt to dislodge the creature. "Begone back to your master." He commanded, but it was then he noticed the paper tied to the owl's leg. "Ah." Understanding finally came to him. A message for the messenger god. He pulled at the string tying the note to the owl's leg to accept deliverance after which the owl joined all the others in the trees..


Padre was first. Deliver your companions or he will not be last. -Jax


Πά…ε. Try as he might to translate, the lines and circles were meaningless to him. It was not the language he created, but if given time he was certain he could translate it. His gaze drifted to the cabin where the others had retreated as he contemplated asking if the note was written in their language, but if it were meant for him, it would be wise for no other eyes to see it. He folded it into fourths and tucked it inside the pouch of the short tunic he wore before he decided to walk into the wooden building, but before he entered, he paused. He looked back up to the trees to where the owls were gathered. "Return my sandals if you wish me to be your errand boy."



The breeze rustled the trees and kicked up dust in the dim light, Vera wanted her thoughts to race, and things to start to connect. Though she couldn’t kick start her brain, it had been a long harrowing twenty four hours, and the monster energy had run dry before the blackout. The owls collecting in the trees and landing on the roof of the car forced her to take a step back. Among the Chicksaw owls were an ill omen, shape shifters, and spirits of the dead.

It was a good thing that Vera didn’t believe in such things as omens. Omens were for those too indecisive to make decisions on their own or were in situations that they knew they shouldn’t be placing themselves in. Though the owls did fill her with a touch of unease she flapped her arms to move them away. They shuffled two steps along the roof and craned their heads, the sputtering of the jeep pulled her attention to her companions.

Another chance to study them, Fritz that moved with the ease of man who was unbothered by the world, and Brennan that by all rights shouldn’t have been upright. Calvin. The man had just vanished, could he have fled to avoid charges for hitting Brennan. An itch of irritation settled between her shoulder blades as Fritz waltzed up and unceremoniously scooped up Lexi. Vera searched for a good reason to protest and that she would do it. Yet her everything was tired and he made it look easy, until Vera had to look away when the light flared. Then it died down. “What do you see? Calvin was quite adamant that we couldn’t go to the hospital. That in an emergency event it was a choke point.” They were walking, Vera growled, and looked at Brennan who seemed dazed. Which was fair. Torn between following the viking with her charge and the tall dark and handsome Vera had a moment of limbo until Brennan followed.

The cabin wasn’t anything special, it was like everyone envisioned a cabin in the woods to be. Brown, flannel, more brown. Manly displays of dead animals hung from the walls in the name of decor. As they settled in, gas lanterns lit, when the switches failed. Vera roamed around the outside of the building until she found an old generator. She flipped the switch and tugged on the rip cord, once and it chugged, second it sputtered, then on the third it purred.

One problem solved, but she came to a short stop when Fritz demanded a meeting. It reminded her of a business executive demanding that she find proof his wife was laid out for the pool boy. Arms folded across her chest as an eyebrow arched and lips pressed into a fine line. “Headlights?” She certainly hadn’t quoted enough for this job, she leaned back against the wall close to the door and window if needed as Fritz began to speak.

A derivative snort managed to escape as he began talking about gods. She had fallen in with lunatics. “Alright so tech gods want to kill or capture Lexi and Brennan. You’re the god of breaking things, and I just had to go eyeball deep with some nutjobs who think the gods are going to save the planet.” Vera leveled dark eyes on blonde and delusional. “How astute of you. I don’t trust you and he’s a victim that I still think needs to be at a hospital.”

Vera pushed off the wall and fished a charger from the bag along with the dead phone. The charger was roughly slotted into an outlet and the phone plugged in. “I ain’t that hard to find. Vera Stillwater, I’m a private investigator based out of Memphis. Calvin Gutjahr hired me a couple of months ago to infiltrate a cult and get his sister back. Which I’ve done but now he’s vanished. So I’m getting my phone charged so I can figure out what’s going on.” Vera studied the two men choosing her next words carefully.

“Can either of you prove anything?”


So the one called Fritz knew all. The time immediately preceding and during his captivity were somewhat of a blur, but Hermes knew Fritz spoke the truth. The war was lost. “I do recall the battles with enemies we couldn’t understand. They were not mortals, yet their powers differed tremendously from ours.” He mused as his mind drifted back to one who controlled the lightning as well as Zeus. “And 2500 years would explain how things became so different. For that, I believe your words, but I dare not claim someone who troubled the travelers that worshiped me, a friend nor ally. I am Hermes, the messenger of the gods and the protector of travelers and thieves.”

Without his sandals, the proof of his divinity was limited. Anything he could do, the aid to the top of the mountain for example, could be explained away as luck. “I doubt you’d like to visit the underworld as proof of who I am. Humans do not fare well walking among the dead when their hearts still beat. It offends the Fates. However, if you have a coin, I may have a way to convince you of who I am.”

“Calvin?” Fritz repeated quietly as he listened to Brennan, puffing away on the sweet-smelling plant burning in his pipe. The well-equipped garage seemed like less of a coincidence now. If it was the Calvin he was thinking of, then at least one tech god already knew where they were. He didn’t know Calvin well enough to know whether or not he’d give the rest their location, but it didn’t really matter either way. One way or another, they would’ve found them anyway. “I’m not your friend nor your ally, and you’re both right to be skeptical. That’s the sort of thinking that might let you see the dawn with your freedom intact, rather than trying to count the hours in the darkness of an oubliette for the rest of your existence.

“You’re free to hand me your phone if you never want to see it working again, but aside from that I think you’ll see plenty of proof before the night is done,” Fritz shrugged, then looked at Brennan. “I am curious to see what you’ll do with a coin though.”

Vera fought to keep her face straight as she listened to the historian recite mythology to her while mister hipster spouted his nonsense. “Right.” Vera patted along her hip until she felt a nickel and flicked it at Brennan. “Are you sure that you don’t feel…mangled?”

To Fritz she did a partial bow as she flourished to present her phone. “Since you wish to show your skill in breaking things, and I swear if you smash my phone your knees will follow.” Vera folded her arms over her chest as her eyes cut between the men. The viking pretending to be a civil war soldier, and the cowboy. Welcome to Nashville.

“I can assure you, I will never reside in such darkness again with or without your aid.” He swore though his attention quickly shifted to the coin. He supposed it made sense for Athena’s likeness to be replaced if she too had been sealed for the last 2500 years, but they could have chosen someone less plain. No matter. Hermes brought the coin down from eye level where he examined it to rest flat in his palm on display for Vera. The glow in his eyes was more pronounced that time as the same blue glow shimmered around the silver piece. “For as long as Vera Stillwater holds the blessing on this coin, the odds shall be in her favor. Will your choice be heads or tails?”

Her head cocked to the side as she debated what kind of powder he had rubbed on the coin to get a chemical reaction. Why would he want to do a coin trick when things were rather dire. “I’ll bite, heads.” For a moment her eyes locked on his and it felt like staring into the depths of something unknown. A chill ran down her spine that landed in her toes and caused them to curl in her tennis shoes.

The years had not taken away his ability to flip a coin fortunately, and sure enough it was heads the fates had chosen. “Again. One time is luck. Twice is a coincidence. Three times will be your proof.”

Vera watched as he flicked the coin and plopped down on heads. “Well I will say that statistics say you had a fifty percent chance to be correct.” Again the flip this time is landed on the edge and held. “What does that mean?” A single dark eyebrow arched before her eyes met his again with a smug smile.

“I…” He stared dumbfoundedly at the coin and then to the woman. “That’s-That’s not possible.” His blessing was absolute. The coin would always land on the side that she had chosen. Had it not been for the retention of his ability to heal, Hermes would have thought he lost his divinity. Such was the severity of what had happened. “Perhaps I am mangled in some sort of way.” He muttered as his eyes shifted from Vera down to his own hands. “Fritz, the prison that you spoke of…Did it have the ability to…” To what? He had to pause to collect his thoughts. “Did it have the ability to drain my powers?”

“I don’t need to smash such delicate technology for it to break.” Fritz was surprised when Vera handed him her phone. He held it out like a waiter holding a serving tray of drinks as he watched Brennan pull off a different trick than the one he seemed to have intended. “I’m not sure what the tech gods are capable of, and I haven’t been in the prison myself. But judging by the powerful folk they’ve stashed away, I would bet they can suppress powers.”

Fritz turned his attention back to the phone in his hand. He extended his senses into it, feeling every soldered connection, every wire, every transistor, searching for the fault that would inevitably cascade into a burning lump of matter in his hand before long. But he felt everything in order. Nothing was out of place. Aside from a largely diminished battery, the phone was in perfect working order and remained so as his brow furrowed while he increased the focus of his attention on it.

“That’s very interesting,” he muttered. As he kept looking, he felt the processor light up, not with malfunction as he had expected, but with activity. Something was happening to the phone in his hand. It was working. It was thinking. Hard. About what, he couldn’t tell. He felt whatever it was racing the quickly draining battery, frantically trying to receive a transmission over a connection that was as near to non-existent as it was possible to be. Suddenly, the screen lit up. “But soft, what light from yonder cell phone breaks?”

In the dim light cast by the cabin’s open wood stove, a hologram of a rather famous pop star slash actress suddenly appeared. Her form was full of static and could barely resolve itself in all the interference, but she still was there, glimmering but translucent like a digital ghost.

“Nat?” Fritz asked.

Tally turned to look at him and her face lit up. “Murph!”

Tally stepped forward and wrapped her arms around Fritz, who stood up, still holding the phone. His face showed a profound sense of confusion.

“Ugh,” she said, turning up her nose as she pulled away from him. Her voice had a tinny quality, coming from the dying phone’s speaker. “You used to dress better.”

Tally laid one finger on Fritz’s shoulder and slid it across his chest, and as she did so, the phone cast another staticky hologram of clothes from different eras onto Fritz. Going backwards in time, he wore 90’s grunge, 80’s punk, 70’s leather, 60’s hippie, and finally she settled on 50’s biker clothes that could’ve come directly from Rebel Without a Cause. To match, she cycled through the eras until she appeared in a poodle skirt.

“And you used to be a real actor,” Fritz shot back. Still confused, but evidently bitter.

“Don’t be like that, Murphy,” she pouted. Then, as if noticing them for the first time, she turned to look at Vera and Brennan. “Aren’t you going to introduce me to your friends?”

“Intrigued, but not enough to give you my name first.” Vera stared at the holographic of the woman and was impressed that Fritz had managed to get holographic from her phone. Meanwhile the coin continued to stand on its end as if fighting against the urges of fate to land on tails. Vera did have to admit that the new outfit was an improvement over the reenactment uniform. “Can you do the other one now?”

“This is Nataly,” Fritz grumbled.

“Tally,” Tally said, stepping towards Vera and giving her a curtsy. “I go by Tally these days. I guess you aren’t a fan of pop music?”

“And I go by Fritz…”

“Shush, dear, the ladies are talking,” Tally shushed him.

For the underworld to have lost a soul, Hades too must have been captured. Had all of those deemed wicked been freed to roam the earth? Under normal circumstances, Hermes would have been intrigued by the possibility, but there were more pressing matters at hand, especially considering there was nothing he could do to rectify said problem. Or so he assumed. It stood to reason that if he could no longer bless a simple coin, he had lost, or more likely had his access to the rivers that led to the Underworld suppressed.

Still, he found himself reaching out to touch the translucent form’s shoulder. “Were you not buried with the proper rituals?” He asked curiously, but he quickly withdrew his hand with a yelp when it felt as though Zeus himself struck the messenger. His arm tensed and shook uncontrollable, and he stumbled back. It was nothing short of a miracle that he was able to catch himself on the wooden table before he collapsed to the ground. “What cursed being are you?!” A sorceress topped the list due to the spells she was able to cast.

“Buried? Baby, I’ve never been more alive. I don’t get buried, I bury others. I slay them!” Tally put her hands defiantly on her hips, before she saw Brennan react so strongly to her touch. She lifted a hand and went cross-eyed looking at it before she reached out and poked Fritz experimentally. As she’d expected, the beam of light of which she was composed projected harmlessly onto the confused man’s chest. “Not usually like that. Usually I just drop diss tracks when people try to beef with me.”

“She’s digital,” Fritz explained, then remembered who he was talking to. “She is made of light and information. Like the words of a book come to life and somehow controlling the light of a fire reflected on a wall. Like in Plato’s cave.”

Fritz thought for a moment. “Do the gods believe in Plato?” He wondered aloud.

It was a lot, the coin finally managed to land on heads as Vera was watching the holograph then Brennan jerk backwards. She knelt down by his side to look at his hand then inspected his arm for any damage. “Vera, Tally. If you must know.” Though if she wasn’t real what kind of trick was Fritz playing?

“Are you okay Brennan?” Vera kept an arm draped over him to make sure he didn’t bump anything else. “Can someone please, in simple words, tell me what we are caught in?” Now she looked up at Fritz and his digital girlfriend accusingly.

“Slay? So she is a warrior.” Hermes initially reasoned, but was quickly corrected. A being made of light and information sounded like an abomination born from the loins of Apollo. His fingers still twitched with the aftermath, but with Vera’s support, the danger of falling ceased. “Thank you. I’m fine, Vera, but I cannot tell you what I don’t fully understand myself. She is one with the light of the sun?”

“One with the light of the sun,” Tally spoke the words like she was getting a feel for them rolling around in her mouth. “I like that. And I already know who you all are. Vera, Brennan, and I’m guessing Lexi is in the other room.”

“Nat has access to any information that was written down.”

“Tally,” she corrected him. “And I didn’t even need it. Calvin told me everything. And judging by how close you’re all acting with each other, I’m guessing you won’t be taking Jax’s offer.”

“Jax’s offer?”

Tally’s image flickered. “It’s nearly time for me to go, darlings,” she gave Fritz a tired smile. “You didn’t hear it from me, but Jax sent a dog after you. I helped him, too. But you know I like it better when it’s a fair fight. More dramatic that way.”

“A dog?”

“Time’s up for me,” Tally said with another flicker. Then the roar of an 80-year-old V-twin motorcycle came from outside as a headlight streaked across the windows. “Maybe for you too.”

Tally disappeared.

[Scene continues in Cry Havoc and Let Slip the Dog of War.]]






“As a token of our appreciation for making the Fairmont Nashville the first hotel in the region to be back up and running again, thanks to your generators and portable cell towers, we would love to offer you the Presidential Suite for the duration of your stay in the area,” the manager said as she threw open the vaulted double doors that led into the suite.

Inside was an oval room with white marble floors and a magnificent view out over the still mostly-dark city of Nashville through glass walls that swept up into a glass domed ceiling that extended back to a raised area above the doorway to which a twin set of stairs ascended. Jax assumed the bedrooms were above since there were no beds on the main floor, though the semi-circular couch certainly could accommodate a dozen or more on its ample luxurious surface. The manager, a blonde with a great body in a tight uniform but who was nevertheless far too old for Jax’s tastes, led him and Avery out through the hidden doors in the glass wall on the far side of the room.

Tally flopped onto the couch and showed precisely zero interest in the grand tour while the manager showed off the heated glass-bottom infinity pool, the boardroom, the dining room, the fully-stocked bar, and finally, just as Jax had guessed, led them up the stairs to show them the bedrooms. The center-most bedroom had a giant circular bed that almost seemed more like a bird’s nest made of Egyptian cotton with embarrassingly-high thread count, big enough for another dozen people.

The master bathroom continued the hellenistic motif of white marble but went further to include ionic columns to hold up the barrel ceiling that was covered in an ancient-looking mosaic, suspended over a nearly room-sized bath. When the manager hit a button, a thin layer of mist fell from invisible nozzles in the ceiling against which a television screen was projected. As they returned to the main room and the tour wound down, the manager stopped and smiled.

“If you would like to watch TV in the main room, just say «I’d like to watch television!» and…” She explained and looked around expectantly. When nothing happened, she frowned.

“Let me try,” Jax said. “I’d like to watch television.”

Instantly, a holographic screen covered the giant glass wall.

“Oh,” Tally said from the couch. Jax turned to look at her and she was suddenly in ultra-high definition. The quality of her projection was so clear that Jax could count the pores on her face and the individual goosebumps that rippled up her arms. “I could get used to this.”

“Now say «I’d like to go for a swim!»,” the manager told Jax.

“I’d like to go for a swim,” he said obediently.

The table that followed the curve of the couch folded away neatly along with half of the floor to reveal another pool that extended out to the pool outside.

“That’s just about the end of the tour, Mr. Nova,” the manager said as she walked towards the door to let herself out. “Would you like any company tonight?”

“Oh, yes, please,” Jax nodded. “Send up a dozen of your girls and let them know that I may need their company for a few days. Maybe a week.”

“Very good, sir,” the manager nodded and gave him one last command with a wink before she closed the door. “Then feel free to tell the room that you’d like to party.”

“I’d like to party,” Tally said before he could. Suddenly, the room lights dimmed and in their place, a million LED strips started flashing different colors. Music started blasting from somewhere. Avery started neatly arranging a powdered substance on the back of the couch before snorting a good chunk of it through a rolled-up hundred-dollar bill. Jax smiled.

“Shouldn’t we be doing something?” Tally asked, clearly not in as much of a party mood as she had led the room to believe.

“We’re just waiting for Creed or Fritz to get back to us,” Jax said as he stripped naked and slipped into the pool. It was perfectly body temperature and almost made him feel like he was floating. He waded over until he was next to the section of the couch where Tally was still flopped on her back, playing with her phone as she always was. From his low angle, he could see that there wasn’t actually anything on the phone. Jax knew she could project herself however she wanted to, and this was just her way of indicating that while she was here, her attention was mostly elsewhere. “If we can get some rest while our quarry is running, we’ll be that much more ready when it’s time to square off.”

“I’m sure you, Avery, and a dozen hookers are going to get a lot of rest tonight,” Tally said.

“Heh,” Avery said as he walked around the couch, but suddenly his eyes rolled up into his skull and he slumped over onto the couch.

“That’s odd,” Jax said. “It usually takes more than a single bump to knock Avery on his ass.”

Jax turned to look at Tally again and he felt the bottom drop out of his stomach. Tally’s projection was suddenly stricken with chromatic aberration, as if the red, green, and blue parts of her projection were misaligned. Her mouths moved, but the only sound that came out was a harsh static.

Looking around, Jax watched as the holographic screen, which had been playing an old movie about the strange inhabitants of a town by the sea, unraveled itself. Not physically, since it was composed of light, but the light patterns themselves became suddenly unstuck from the limited dimensions of a screen. Rays of light spiraled into Jax’s eyes. The ocean itself filled the room and swallowed Jax. A face took on impossible proportions and began chanting words in a language lost to time. Around the room, every object that Jax had once recognized unfolded itself like origami into infinitely repeating fractals.

But for a moment, some presence pushed back against the madness and the world groaned as it compressed itself back into some semblance of reality just long enough for Jax to see Tally’s face. Not the Digi Tally persona he’d known since the start of the information age, but an older persona. She was androgynous, with short brown hair and bright electric blue eyes that were filled with terror.

“The board,” was all he could hear her say before they overpowered even her grasp on the information and understanding in his mind. The world ceased to be, along with Jax within it.

All that was left within Jax was the overwhelming feeling of horror at that which was not understood. And in his current state, nothing could be understood.

A voice that was a thousand voices speaking in unison and disharmony began to resolve itself, but it had to reconstruct his understanding of language before he could make any sense of it.

THE ANCIENT GODS HAVE RETURNED

Jax struggled, clinging to his understanding of language for what felt like a lifetime as he tried and failed countless times to reply. Each time he made no obvious progress, but still he eventually formed a word. A name. The first name he’d ever known. His brother’s name.

“Fritz,” Jax said.

IRRELEVANT AS HE HAS NO DOMAIN WITHOUT US

THE ANCIENT GODS COULD TAKE BACK HUMANITY

“Creed,” Jax replied with the next name that came to mind.

HIS COMMITMENT TO JUSTICE IS ABSOLUTE BUT THAT WILL WORK AGAINST YOU WHEN HE LEARNS THE TRUTH

“Patience.”

TIME ENOUGH FOR PATIENCE WHEN THE THREAT IS GONE

YOU CAN BE REPLACED

THE TWINS ARE COMING

YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED

As suddenly as it left, reality suddenly snapped back into place around him. Tally was gone. Avery was just starting to stir on the couch. A knock came at the door.

Jax swallowed the lump in his throat and exhaled slowly.

“Avery, get the door, would you? I desperately need to unwind,” Jax said. “I just heard from the board.”






Calvin pondered those blue eyes that had begun to unravel everything at its roots, decades of prosperity, and power. Those eyes haunted his sleep and thoughts, muddled his thoughts in a way that even the reflected blur of lines on the highway couldn’t even bring clarity. When Calvin closed within spitting distance to Nashville he had to abandon the truck. The city was in lockdown swarming with national guard.

Damn Jax for not picking a location that was easier to access, but at least he was close to Lexi. “Hey man, you can’t be here. City is under curfew.” Two other men stood behind him, hands tightening on the rifle that rested against his chest. Spot lines turned on Calvin, causing his eyes to scrunch as he held up his hands in mock surrender.

“I'm supposed to be here. Call your superiors, I’m with Jax. Calvin Monroe. Call them.”

The baby-faced man in front of him exchanged a side eyed glance with the man to his right. “Why are you walking in? Where is your ID?”

“Have you seen the city, looting, fighting, nothing running that ain’t brought in. I’m an engineering specialist they called in. Here, come get my wallet.” Calvin kept his hands up as he turned, stupid mortals, but the last he needed was attention. Even more so these men were keeping the rest of the riots at bay. As the man pulled his wallet out Calvin slowly turned to face the man. “Call it in, you’ll probably get his assistant Tully.”

Calvin waited while the phone calls were being made. It would be insane for Tally not to have an alert setup when his name popped up. Unless she decided to fuck with him but that seemed unlikely given the current circumstances.






“Calvin’s at the blockade without a car?” Jax laughed. Tally didn’t extend him the courtesy of a reply, she just kept fiddling with her phone as most of her personas were busy harvesting views elsewhere. “Avery, call down to the valet and have my car brought around front.”

Jax pulled himself up out of a pool swarming with naked women for the second time tonight and grabbed his pants. When he discovered that his underwear wasn’t with them, he glanced around frantically.

“I’ll summon the goons too,” Avery stammered as he lifted his head from the lap of one of the ladies, sniffed the last remnants of illicit powder from his nose, and looked over to Tally. “You coming too?”

“No, she isn’t, and you aren’t either,” Jax said annoyedly just before he spotted one of the women poking her head up from behind the couch to peek at him. He narrowed his eyes at her. “I’m taking my car, not the Beasts. I wanna drive. And maybe let Calvin drive back, we’ll see.”

Without warning, Jax jumped up onto the couch and the woman screamed and giggled as she ran away, holding his underwear while Jax gave chase.

“Are you sure that’s a good idea?”

“What’s the worst that could happen?”






Bullets rained down from the darkened city on Jax’s custom modified Koenigsegg Regera as he carefully navigated the car between improvised barriers that had quite obviously, at least in hindsight, been set up to slow him down.

“Tally!” He screamed as he started accelerating down a straightaway while his attackers continued to shoot at him. “Help!”

In the humid evening air, the street lights cast a crisp triangle of light through which he drove at increasingly ludicrous speeds as bullets chipped away at his bodywork. Suddenly, Tally’s holographic face materialized in the light beams, each one a freeze frame that only resolved into motion as he drove past them in sequence.

“What is it this time?” While he saw Tally outside in the streetlights, her voice spoke to him softly from one of the stereo speakers in his headrest. He couldn’t help but feel like some disappointed mistress was whispering into his ear. Jax shuddered. Not that he didn’t like that sort of thing, but it was just too much while he was also in great danger of sudden death.

“People are shooting at me, Tally,” he whined. “After all I did for them.”

“They’re the sewer rats,” Tally stated bluntly. “You insulted them by kidnapping the Regent right from their lair.”

“I brought him back!” Jax pleaded.

“The evidence suggests that they don’t think that excuses anything,” Tally replied, turning her holographic head to look at the flashes of gunfire in the darkened city around them. “But you’re welcome to stop the car and plead your case.”

“Just get me out of this mess,” Jax snarled.

“No,” she said and disappeared.

“No?”

A long moment passed.

“Not unless you ask nicely,” she whispered into his ear.

Jax frowned and considered his options. When a bullet struck the windshield near his face, the bullet-resistant glass caved. And so did he.

“Would you be so kind as to get me out of this mess?”

“You have to say the magic word.”

“Please, Tally.”

“Okay, one second.”

Tally spawned a couple stripped-down versions of herself. One invaded the car’s computers and made room for herself, overriding and deleting several safety programs in the process. Others invaded newly-restarted computers around the city that oversaw security cameras along the paths between Jax and Calvin. And the final one found a supercomputer at Vanderbilt. There was already something running on it, but she paused it to make room for herself as she ingested all the data coming from the car and the security cameras and plotted a route.

“Got it,” she said. Instantly, every light on the car went dark. So too did the street lights. Tally yanked the wheel hard enough that it would’ve broken Jax’s wrists if he hadn’t let go. She steered the car down an alleyway and the automatic traction control should have clamped the brakes down to keep the rear wheels from spinning, but that was one of the car’s systems she’d deleted. Instead, Tally reacted faster than humanly possible to ease up on the throttle just long enough for the traction to come back before flooring it again.

It was roughly at this point that Tally started to get annoyed by Jax’s terrified screaming, so she muted the microphone in the interior of the car.

AD_4nXeRc_r4UnMvurVhiX_bXUF-n7ekUXMFQnkrCoAddtowOzh_kPUUKO2HIBeodUIT1KVvHOV4fn_1E7hLnx41jX2Yvql0ybmZzkMT3GA79V7H-__C8II6B5OnIUTGwSY-61EoWI4POC6Af91HDU-tVnFeIDXD


“Don’t you love the smell of gunpowder in the morning, Cole?”

“It’s the middle of the night, and we’re literally in hell, Zuri.”

“Hell? This is practically an amusement park. I love a good gunfight, especially when a sexist is involved.” Only Zuri would find amusement in a dystopian world.

“You know what I love? The original plan of going to the only place that has power because that’s probably where Jax will be.” It also helped that he was fairly confident it was rated five stars if memory served him correctly.

Rather than answering him, Zuri held up one finger and pushed him back further away from the road. “Wait for it…” She instructed as the sound of gunfire grew louder.

Cole knew damn well his sister wasn’t a psychic, but she did a good impression of one. Sure enough, a car worth more than anyone made in a year sped by fast enough for the gush of wind caused by the speed to blow her hair in her face. “Jax?” She asked with a smirk.

“Jax.” He reluctantly agreed. “Should we?”

“Get a gun and join the fun?”

“Zuri, you had an entire helicopter and car ride to get over the ‘brothers we have problems,’ so now we focus on the problems. Problem one being the people shooting at him.”

“Fine.” Her acquiescence came with a roll of her eyes. She inhaled deeply before nodding. She lifted her arm and positioned her thumb and index finger like she was pointing a gun in the direction where the smell of gunpowder was strongest. When she was sure her aim was solid, she snapped her thumb against her middle finger. With her fingers acting as the ignitor and fuse, the cartridges in the guns exploded in an agonizing display of fire and carnage. “Okay. Now I’m over it. You’re in charge of problem two. Getting us a vehicle to catch up to him.”



“That’s strange,” Tally said as she swerved the car to dodge the last of the bullets, and then everything went quiet. Except for the 1500 horses propelling her and Jax into the darkness towards the edge of town where Calvin sat waiting, which were rather loud. But outside, a series of small explosions signaled the end of the attack. Tally, or rather the original Tally process that had spawned all the children who were getting Jax out of the mess of his own making, flitted around the city until she settled into the emergency dispatch center that was currently fielding an abnormal number of calls requesting ambulances for burns and blast injuries.

“I think the twins are in town,” Tally pointed out as she slipped back into the car. With the danger gone, she flipped on the interior lights and cast a holographic projection of herself into the seat next to Jax. “The ride back should be quite pleasant.”

Tally looked at Jax, who was moving his mouth and gesticulating frantically. She wondered why she couldn’t hear him, until she remembered that she’d muted the interior microphone. When she unmuted him, she only hesitated for a fraction of a second before putting him back on mute.

“You can stay muted until you calm down,” she sighed as she lifted her phone and resumed her usual video-making. She spent a few seconds cutting together a compilation of onboard video and security camera footage of Jax’s car racing through Nashville, before posting it to TikTok. As the view count rose, she closed her eyes and felt her power increasing proportionally. “Look, the checkpoint’s up ahead. You don’t want to cry in front of Calvin, do you?”

Jax’s car rolled to a stop behind the line of National Guards and the driver’s side door pushed out and flipped forward. Jax spent a moment composing himself before he unbuckled and climbed out, waving to the guards who had stopped Calvin.

“He’s with me,” he said, his voice cracking noticeably.

Calvin could hear the purr of the twin turbocharged engines V8’s, three electric motors, that had been Jax’s idea. Calvin would admit he had been opposed, electric just didn’t have the same purr. Not to mention the vibrations from the fuel burning engines. It caused his pants to feel restrictive, Calvin shuffled slightly to the right and snatched his belongings from the man. “I believe that is my ride.”

Jax’s voice did manage to dampen the excitement but nonetheless it meant he was one step closer to Lexi and putting the rabbit back in the hat. “Jax, Tall….” the words trailed off when his eye landed on the windshield.

“What monster did this to such a beautiful beast of design?” Calvin ran a hand over the jagged pieces of spider webbed glass that remained in the frame. The headlights and interior brightened and the engine purred at a perfect octave. “I’m driving. Clearly you’ve learned no respect for mechanical husbandry. Bad enough that this area is a hellscape ground zero, at this rate Cumberland River will become the Styx.” Calvin moved to the driver side of the car and looked at the glimmering piece of nirvana. It was made for speed.
 
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Changing the Channel​

It was not wise to make promises one doubted they could keep, but sometimes life required harmless deception. Thus the reason his gentle push was accompanied by a reassuring yet false smile. While procreation with the mortals was common to the point of being expected, no god that he was aware of had been spiritually bonded to a human. As such, he had no way to anticipate what would happen next, but someone had to be first. Morpheus could think of no one more capable of undertaking that feat than Artemis.

Rather than retreat from the troubled unknown, Morpheus crossed his arms over his chest and waited for the arrival of his anticipated guest if his theory proved to be correct. Time ticked by and gradually the water stilled. “That’s odd…” He muttered, but as he took stock of his surroundings he noticed that it was not only the pond that ceased all movement. Each animal, each leaf, and even the blades of grass appeared frozen in place. With bated breath, he waited and without warning, the world took on a life of its own.

The tree line that formerly existed in the distance rushed towards him, and the space between them grew smaller as if forming a wall. The clouds expanded until they overtook the blueness of the sky. The grass under his feet changed to a texture that felt like the fur of the animals that melted into the ground. Gone was the pond instead replaced by an unkempt bed, and it was at that point that Morpheus realized he had found his way into a new domain, and the smile on his face became a bit more genuine. His faith in Artemis was not misplaced after all though his assumption was only partially correct. His theory was that when Artemis awoke, her new host would take her place in Artemis’s domain. Instead it appeared just as two souls could not occupy the same space, they could not occupy the same domain.

Typically, he would have taken a moment to decipher the paintings of people fascinated by skulls and oddly a baby submerged in water that decorated the walls, but his attention was drawn to the blonde woman who sat cross legged on the floor. Her gaze was fixated on some sort of box positioned on the floor with moving images flashed inside of it.

For a few seconds, some sort of ceremony was displayed where someone proclaimed the Take back our earth. Then the images shifted to a young girl, no more than ten, traversing a forest with a dog at her feet while forest critters watched in interest. Back and forth between the scenes, the box continuously moved.

Make the earth whole.

C’mon boy.

Fall and falter.

You’re special, child.

For someone who had never seen a painting move, the speed at which the pictures moved was almost dizzying. There were a few answers provided, but with each one came more questions. The young girl was clearly Artemis’s host, but what of the ceremony? Was it meant to summon Artemis? Was the girl a sacrifice? What human could possibly have such knowledge to do what a god could not?

The one who could satisfy his curiosity was within arm’s length, yet he hesitated as he reached out to break the trance. There was no way for him to know what would happen if he interrupted her domain, but the time has passed for meekness. His hand dropped back to his side, and rather than touch her, he chose to sit on the floor beside her. “And who might you be?” He asked, his voice as soft and disarming as he possibly could make it.







“Who are you?” Lexi stared at the long dark locks then into the dark eyes. “You’re not one of them are you? No you couldn’t be or you would know of me?” The woman pushed from the floor and did a slow turn around the room. Old hardwood floors uneven polished to a deep sheen of chocolate with a faded rug.

“I didn’t ask for this, why are you in my grandmother's house?” The air had a hazy quality.

“Are we going to the spring fling?”

“I go wherever your dream leads me, my child.” Morpheus explained, remaining seated in order to watch both her and the display. “If this…spring fling is where you wish to be, so too will I, but I must ask you one question. Who do you believe me not to be?”
 

Cry Havoc and Let Slip the Dog of War​

When the motorcycle roared outside, Fritz immediately dropped to the floor and crawled over to the window. He pressed himself against the wall and pulled the curtain aside just enough that he could peek outside.

“Normally I wouldn’t be too concerned, since I could disarm him with a wave of my hand,” Fritz whispered loudly. His voice was thin and breathy, clearly worried about the man outside, but he hissed loudly enough that he hoped Vera and Brennan would hear him. “But something is wrong with me. The same thing that’s wrong with Brennan, I expect. Anyway, simply walking away won’t work. I could try making him a follower of mine, but I’m sure Tally vetted him well enough to rule that out. Whatever he believes in, his belief is probably unshakeable even in the face of miracles.”

Fritz’s eyes shot around the small cabin, similarly to how he did when he first stepped inside, but he wasn’t looking for an ambush any more, he was looking for an escape. Or a weapon. Whatever exactly he was looking for, his frustrated expression made it evident that he didn’t find it, so he went back to peeking out the window.

“Let me get a read on him,” Fritz whispered. “Maybe he’s the type who can be reasoned with. You all may be surprised to know that I’ve been on the wrong side of the law a few times, and I’ve got a pretty good sense for what they’re like now.”





Creed let his bike continue to growl as he kicked out the stand and threw a leg over to sit side-saddle. He watched the house for a moment, before taking some time to pat down his clothes to get out as much of the dried mud as he could. The road here had been bad enough for a road bike, but more than once he’d been following a rut and took his hand off to shift just as the rut veered sharply, throwing him like a bronco. As he patted himself, his eyes strayed to the cars outside, particularly their tires. As near as he could, he matched them to the tracks he’d seen at their last-known location. Vera, Lexi, Brennan, and Fritz. But don’t touch Fritz. At least don’t kill him. The rest, he’d bring in alive. Though unconscious was an option if they chose it.

Sitting up on his bike, he eyed the firelight flickering through the curtained windows in front while his mind traveled back in time. He was a cadet in the Houston Police Academy. He vaguely remembered the rigorous physical training they’d put him through in the day, but it was mostly abstract now. He couldn’t remember the details, just how he felt exhausted all the time. The evenings of study were clearer and he could almost recite the handbook even now. “When approaching the whereabouts of a suspect, assume they are armed and dangerous. Call for backup, wait, and watch until the backup arrives before approaching.” The Rangers and FBI had almost identical guidelines, with obvious exceptions when there was the threat of imminent danger to the public.

Taking one last look around, Creed assessed that there was no imminent danger. He was sure whoever was inside knew he was there, unless the cabin was substantially better soundproofed and the curtains were much thicker than they looked. Just to be safe, he reached a hand over to the throttle and gunned the engine a few times, then he slipped his left hand into his pocket, where his fingers touched the cross he kept more out of comfort than any sense of piet, while he watched and waited.

Now his thoughts turned to a memory that was nearly as old as his days in the academy, except that it was crystal clear. He remembered the details of that day better than what he’d eaten for breakfast. It was soon after he’d been recruited by the Rangers when he rolled up to a shack not far from El Paso. He had reliable intel that the cartel had dug a tunnel from the basement under the border into Juarez and were using it for smuggling. His partner was out that day, so he was alone. And, like the good cop, he’d called for backup. When he gave his location, the local dispatch paused before replying to him. That was the first red flag. The second was when they couldn’t give him an exact ETA for the backup. At the time, he hadn’t thought anything of it. When he saw a dust trail approaching, he’d been excited. And surprised they’d been so quick. Until the cartel heavies stuck their assault rifles out their windows and opened fire.

When nothing happened, kept his eyes on the house while he drew his pistol. He was half-ready to be shot at as Fritz’s crazies were obviously ready to do earlier tonight. But seeing nothing, he held his pistol in front of his bike’s headlight and carefully unloaded the spent cartridges he’d emptied earlier at Fritz’s cabin. He dropped them to the ground in front of the light and replaced them with full ones, all the while keeping his eyes on the house. The .44 magnum rounds were substantial enough that he could easily tell when his gun was fully loaded just from the weight. Without looking down, he tested the cylinder by using his fingers to spin it manually, feeling it cycle through each chamber one at a time until he was satisfied. Then he held his thumb on the hammer and pulled the trigger, feeling the mechanism give resistance and then suddenly release. If his thumb hadn’t held back the hammer, it would have struck the firing cap with some force and fired into the ground. Instead, he eased the hammer down until it rested gently before sliding the gun back into his holster.

Creed finally killed his bike’s engine but left the headlight on as he stood and sauntered towards the cabin. “Fuck backup,” he grunted.





“I don’t think he’s the reasonable type,” Fritz concluded after watching the dog’s show of loading his revolver and perhaps more importantly, removing two cartridges he’d likely already fired tonight. “I should’ve parked around the back. As it is, we’d have to get past him to drive away.”

Fritz crawled into the kitchen and quickly pulled open the window, before throwing one leg and one arm out like it was the most natural thing in the world for him. He paused then, straddling the window sill, turning back to look at Vera.

“Keep him talking, I’ll roll a car out back,” Fritz hissed. “When it’s ready, I’ll get his attention out front. When you hear my signal, get everyone out the back and drive as fast as you can. Don’t wait for me.”

Fritz slipped out, and then Creed knocked on the door.

“Special Agent Creed Garza with the NSA,” Creed announced. His words were steady and calm, but there was a subtle tension that betrayed the righteous anger he felt whenever he sensed that violence was imminent. He’d already killed two men tonight. He’d rather not kill more. But he would if he had to. “Open up. I’d like to ask you a few questions.”


Creed turned his head when he thought he saw the curtains shift behind the window next to the door. If they had moved, they were still again, but he could see a sliver of floor at just the right angle. Trying to see a little more, he took a step to one side.

Suddenly, a flash of lightning reflected off his face in the window and for a moment, just for a fraction of a second, he saw the light and shadows turn the profile of his face into a bright white skull grinning at him viciously.

Just as the thunder rolled over the hills and through the trees, Creed spun and drew his revolver on what he thought was someone standing behind him. When he saw nothing but more flashes of distant lightning, he exhaled the breath he hadn’t realized he was holding.

“Whew,” he breathed as he slowly holstered his gun and palmed the cross in his pocket. “Get it together, Creed, you’re jumping at shadows.”

Creed turned away from the shadows and knocked on the door again.

And so too did the shadows turn away from Creed.

The display between the two men had been less than impressive, and now they had someone else in the fray. It was common knowledge from all training and exercises that when things went sideways it was a narrow window to get things moving in one direction before anarchy followed. Vera debated if she should listen to Fritz, she trusted the law more than the civil war reenactment actor. Then the poor man that Calvin had hit with a car.

“Maybe we should hear him out?” At the same time Lexi stumbled in from the guest bedroom. Hair a disheveled halo of silver and vibrant eyes. They locked on Brennan. “What is this place? Where is Morpheus? Our temples?” Immediately her eyes darted around the room to take in the assortment of unknown items. Memories stacked upon memories until it was a haze. The forest felt wrong.

“Hey hey, you should sit down? I was sent by your brother, but I don’t know what happened to him?”

“Which one?” Lexi accepted Vera’s hand as she was guided to a chair. “Who’s outside yelling?”

“Calvin.”

“I don’t have a brother named Calvin.” Lexi looked to Brennan again, he felt familiar. Comforting.

Again there was an overwhelming number of activities happening at one time. Outside a beast, one unlikely to have been tamed by man, growled. A titan perhaps if the sound was enough to trouble Fritz for Hermes could think of nothing else worthy enough to unnerve a self-proclaimed god. Inside, yet another…entity made its presence known. It had the appearance of the one whom Fritz aided inside, but there was an ancient wisdom in her eyes that was further confirmed when she spoke of Morpheus and their temples.

“I do not know the answer to either of your questions, yet.” But Hermes would have to find answers if he ever wished to fully regain his divinity. “But it has always been impossible to predict the location of the dream walker. He will come when he is ready.”

Who or whatever awaited outside was determined to enter. Fritz and Vera did not seem to disagree on engagement though Hermes had his doubts. The failure of his coin toss (and imprisonment) was too fresh for him to be fully confident in his ability to be the victor in a battle, but he had never been one to live in fear. His wits would have to be enough.

Though he did not open the barrier between them, he did call back, “What is this NSA you speak of? ”

“The National Security Agency,” Creed replied before continuing. He felt a lingering prickle across the skin on the back of his neck from the shadow that had spooked him a moment ago, making him shudder slightly as he spoke. “You know this window isn’t double-glazed, I can make out most of what you’re talking about. If you don’t mind, just let me in so I can ask a few questions and then I’ll be on my way.”

“My gun is in the car, but I tend to trust law enforcement. If it comes to a fight we outnumber him four, well, three to one. Creed, I’m Vera Tafton, Private Investigator. How did you find this place?” Vera moved towards the door without opening it.

Lexi continued to look at the disheveled man, then looked at her own hands.. The fingers were shorter than she remembered, hands moved to her breasts to pat, smaller than should have been. Reluctantly she plucked at the t-shirt. “I have memories of being small. Why do I have memories of being small?!” Then she tried to recall her last memory. It had been a meadow, in Greece, there was a fire, and something in the fire. What had it been? Her head began to ache.

“What is a gun?” Hermes asked quietly now that their visitor had revealed the thinness of the walls.

“This cabin belongs to Calvin Lastnamehere. He and some known associates of his are persons of interest in the investigation of the ongoing Nashville power outage,” Creed explained, leaning against the door to try and hear better now that they’d quietened down. “Though truthfully, I found this place through a lot of trial and error since most of the roads leading here aren’t on a map.”

Nashopolis Hermes recalled, and Calvin was the not-brother of the other woman in the room. He glanced over to her, and she seemed troubled speaking of additional memories. It stood to reason that she was the reason for Creed’s visit, but Hermes doubted her usefulness at that time if she knew of beings like Morpheus. Still he moved to kneel in front of her to ask, “Is there a memory of this Creed?”

Lexi looked at the man, a hand reaching out slowly to stroke his cheek. He felt warm and comforting, familiar, and friendly. “No, no Creed, but I know you. I’m Artemis, but feel compelled towards a Lexi?”

Vera looked at them hunkered close together and muttered a silent curse under her voice. Damn Fritz for being right, and fuck this situation. Double fuck Calvin for putting her in this situation and he owed double what she had quoted. “Sorry we don’t know Calvin. We were just looking to get off the roads and somewhere safe. Nashville wasn’t in a good spot when we left. People were starting to loot and panic.”

Of course the place wasn’t on a map, now Vera saw it for what it was, a doomsday vault. An awful one. “What do you mean?” Vera hissed at Lexi.

“My brother is Apollo.”

At that moment a wet cat had a happier expression than Vera. Of course Lexi would be one of the cult nut bags. She had been sent in to rescue her. “Right. Let’s just move towards the back and find Fritz.”


Outside, Fritz crept around the house through the darkness, but stopped when he saw that the gun-happy cop was still on the front porch. There was no way he could reach Vera’s car without being seen, he decided, then started looking around for options. His eyes fell upon the towering barn and he wondered if there was more than just parts inside, so he crept quietly inside and started to look around.


“That’s very interesting, Vera, but you were explicitly named as one of Calvin’s associates,” Creed said before reaching down to try opening the door. Upon finding it locked, he took a step back before kicking the door just to the side of the door handle. Surprisingly, given the roughshod construction and thin windows, the door didn’t budge and something clicked in his ankle before a sharp pain shot up his leg.

“Mmph,” he grunted while he took a breath. “Well, now I’m pissed.”

Drawing his gun, he drew back the hammer, pointed it at the door handle, and squeezed the trigger. The force from the .44 magnum round blew a foot-wide hole where the handle had been, and sent splinters of wood flying everywhere. Only then, he saw why the door hadn’t budged. The wood was just a veneer over a steel fire door in a security frame. But it wasn’t enough to stop his bullet, which left the steel twisted and deformed as the door creaked open on now-misaligned hinges.

“Would you look at that,” Creed said as he stepped inside with his gun still drawn. “Someone blew the door open before I got here, and when I arrived I had reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing so I proceeded inside. Now, why don’t we all sit down and answer some of my questions?”

Fuck. Instincts kicked in and Vera dove when she heard the gunshot only daring to look up when Creed stood in the plumes of dust. Lexi had covered her ears wondering if Zeus had arrived. “Look we don’t want any trouble.” Vera kept her hands up as she stood trying to take in Creed. Boots, button up, and everything that reminded her of a ranger.

“Always been with the NSA?”

“Just hired,” Creed admitted as he gestured towards the couches with his left hand. As violent as his entrance had been, he was careful not to point his gun at anyone. “On loan from the FBI. Before that, Texas Rangers. Got a commendation for winning a shootout with a squad of cartel thugs.

“Now, Vera, you and me are acquainted, why don’t you introduce me to your compadres?”

“I knew it.” Vera moved towards the sofa keeping an eye on her pair of ducklings. Praying they didn’t say anything crazy.

“That is Lexi. A girl I rescued. Brennan, that got hit by a car. Luckily he’s okay. I think someone gave you bad information, Creed and I’m happy to help sort it, call in some favors.”

Lexi finally lowered her hands and returned them to Brennan? “Brennan?” Her brow furrowed looking at the man.

Artemis. So Hermes was not the only one to walk the earth once more, but it did raise the question of who else had awakened. He wasn’t given the opportunity to respond in kind to her revelation with the explosive entrance that did cause him to bring one arm up to cover his face.

With his attention divided, he was only able to follow half of either conversation, but there was one detail Hermes picked up. “Why do you lie?” He asked as he stood. “The door was not open when you arrived. Tell a lie once and all your truths become questionable.” He could not place the origin of the saying, but it felt as though the words had been ingrained in him his entire life.

(Continues below.)


In the barn, Fritz noticed something covered with a tarp, tucked behind person-sized toolboxes on wheels. Pushing the boxes to the side, he carefully grabbed the edge of the tarp and pulled it away. Underneath was a pristine car that must have been at least 70 years old, just judging by the shape. Fritz didn’t recognize it, which meant it probably didn’t break down very often even back in its day. All over the body work, there was livery like a race car, but it looked like a bone-stock family car. Walking around the side, Fritz read “Fabulous Hudson Hornet.”

“Huh,” Fritz mused for a moment, then ducked when he heard the blast of a large-bore handgun from outside. “Well, we don’t have a lot of options. Please don’t break.”

Fritz gingerly opened the driver’s side door and smiled when a set of keys fell from behind the sun visor. He stuck the keys in the ignition, but didn’t start it. Instead, he pulled it out of gear and released the handbrake before pushing it agonizingly slowly out towards the back of the cabin.


“Lexi. Brennan.” Creed touched the brim of his Stetson while looking at each person and repeating their names as Vera introduced them. “Wouldn’t be the first time I got some bad information, so let’s sort this out.”

Creed looked Brennan up and down before he replied to his accusations. “The truth of the things is sometimes subjective, sir. You say it wasn’t open, and maybe that’s true for you. But what’s true for me was that it was open and I need to make sure nobody inside is in any imminent danger. And courts tend to favor the subjective truth of national heroes more than local yokels. So if you don’t mind taking a seat, we can maybe come to a collective understanding of the truth.”

“No, thank you. I’d rather stand, but you are welcome to sit if you’d like.” To Hermes it was too close to being asked to kneel, and there was only one who held that level of reverence. “I do not know this word yokels, but I suspect it describes one who has an odd definition of the word truth.”

Following the sample Creed set, Hermes too studied the man, specifically the item in his hand. “Is that what’s called a gun?” He asked, the blue in his eyes marginally brightening before he looked to Creed’s shoes as well. “If Vera’s is in her…car, yours should be there too.”

Vera looked at Brennan. “Please sit down.” Creed was essentially telling them that he could and would shoot them and he had ways to make them look as if they were in the wrong. “So Creed, for the sake of time and interest, what don’t you tell me what you think it is we’ve done?”

Fritz was the wild card. This man was looking for Calvin and herself. Lexi had begun to stare at Creed. “Perhaps a hunt in the wild? You look like a man who would appreciate that.”

“Yes, sir,” Creed held his gun sideways to show it to Brennan in profile. “This is a .44 magnum revolver. I used to know a speech about how powerful it is from a movie, but it eludes me at this moment. Anyway, you saw it punch a hole in a steel door.

“My sources tell me that Vera, Brennan, and Lexi were at ground zero among the terrorist group that was responsible for setting off an electromagnetic pulse that took Nashville’s electrical grid offline. My gut tells me that the three of you aren’t personally responsible for whatever set that off, but at the very least you can point me towards who did. If you don’t, I’m sure the NSA can dig up or otherwise produce enough evidence to pin it on the three of you anyway, while I chase down the real culprit.” Creed turned to Lexi. “This is my hunt. I hunt those who commit crimes. And there aren’t many places wilder than the hills of Tennessee.”

Creed remained standing and facing Brennan, clearly unable to relax while the other man was standing.

“I was told that someone named Fritz Murphy might be helping y’all, but that seems to have been incorrect,” Creed explained. “What can you all tell me about…”

Just then, the roar of a V-twin motorcycle engine came from outside. Before he turned, Vera, Lexi, and Brennan got a good look at the fury burning in his eyes. Creed walked out, hobbling slightly on his injured ankle.

Outside, Creed saw that the Jeep was now pressed up against the house, and a blonde man in simple clothes was sitting on his motorcycle, which had some piece of scrap metal jammed into its keyhole. Sitting atop the motorcycle’s gas tank was a glass mason jar with its lid off, full of some clear liquid. Fritz struck a match and lit his pipe while waiting for Creed to say something.

“That’s my bike,” Creed said.

“Yup.”

“You must be Fritz.”

“Right again.”

“Do you know who I am?”

“Got me. Who the fuck are you?” Fritz asked. “Clint Eastwood?”

“I’m the guy who’s going to shoot you unless you get off my bike.”

“You could do that,” Fritz said with a smile as he dropped the match into the jar of nearly pure ethanol. The surface of the alcohol lit up in a bright blue flame. He picked up the jar. “But you should be more concerned with this.”

“You gonna throw that at me?”

“Nope,” Fritz said, and lobbed the jar at his jeep, hoping that Vera had gotten the others out the back by now.

Creed realized that he had a choice to make. He could kill Fritz, but then the jar would hit the jeep, and Creed could only assume that was bad. Or he could shoot the jar out of the air, but he could already see that Fritz was gunning the motorcycle and would be away before he got another shot.

But Creed was fast. He brought his gun up to his hip and slapped the hammer back with his left hand, firing off a shot at Fritz before pulling the hammer back again and shooting the jar.

The first bullet caught the edge of Fritz’s shoulder. Blood sprayed into the air in a fine mist, but not enough to take him down. The jar, however, erupted into tiny flaming pieces of glass. Which would have harmlessly bounced against the jeep, if it weren’t for the oil-soaked rag that was loosely stuffed into the open gas pipe. The oil-soaked rag caught the last lick of flame from the burning cloud of ethanol and it quickly spread to the gasoline vapor running down the pipe into the gas reservoir below.

The octane in the gas tank quickly erupted, ballooning the tank until it ruptured and the burning gasoline sent enough shrapnel up into the bed of the jeep to tear it apart and cut into the hundred or so mason jars of nearly pure ethanol. Fritz’s seemingly never-ending cache of pure Kentucky moonshine. The jars broke and burned even faster than the gasoline, erupting in a ball of flame that engulfed the three bags of wet fertilizer that were sitting on top. The bags ignited and sent the fertilizer up and outwards in a quickly-expanding cloud. As it turns out, fertilizer also burns. But slowly. And only when mixed with just the right amount of air. When the cloud had expanded enough, the gasoline and ethanol were still burning and ignited the fertilizer. At this point, the substance that began to coat the remains of the jeep, the cabin, the trees, and everything else within a few hundred yards was more or less equivalent to napalm.

Thankfully for Creed, the first and second shockwaves had sent him flying back into the cabin, so he was only hit with a few globs of napalm across his arm, upper torso, and a small amount on his face. So he was only slightly on fire as he was launched through the kitchen window and over the hood of the Hudson Hornet in the backyard, into which Vera had wrangled Lexi and Brennan and was currently in the process of driving back around the house, chasing Fritz down the old dirt roads as Calvin’s cabin and much of the surrounding area burned.





The moving images shifted into a scene far more disturbing than anything that had been displayed thus far. It was as though the fires of Hesphetus’s forge had been unleashed on the world, and Morpheus could only watch in morbid fascination as the flames engulfed everything they touched. He had seen what humans were capable of during wars. Their ability to travel and living accommodations were not the only thing that had advanced during his imprisonment.The way they would stab each other with their spears and swords until their opponent stopped moving, but what he witnessed was a level of carnage not meant to be unleashed upon mortals.

Or…perhaps it was not meant to be wielded by mortals.

It was only for a split second, but Morpheus caught sight of a crumpled form on the ground. He could not tell if the man was alive, but there was one way to find out. “Be still, my child. I will return for you.” He promised before he reached out to touch the box in front of him.

Yet rather than feeling the glass against his finger tips, Morpheus touched nothing but air as he found himself tumbling through a void of red and orange hues. The heat was nearly unbearable for even one without a physical form. It wasn’t often that Morpheus hesitated entering into a new dreamscape, but something about this one filled him with a sense of dread.

“Too hot,” Creed chanted over and over again in a mantra that drove him forward. He ran so slowly and the flames were licking at his heels. But he kept moving. He had something left to do. He couldn’t really form the thought in his mind, but he knew there was something left to do. No matter what happened, he needed to do it, and it was that determination that kept him out of the flames.

When he felt someone else, he almost remembered what he needed to do, but it wasn’t quite right. It wasn’t the right person.

“Watch out,” Creed said. “There’s fire. Gotta keep moving.”

Morpheus’s feet touched the charred ground yet there was no time for him to catch his bearings as he fell into step beside his companion. “And where exactly is that we’re moving?” He asked as he looked around for any sort of clue that would give him insight into this new player. “What have you done that’s so terrible that you gain no peace even when you rest?”

“Moving forward,” Creed replied unhelpfully. He slowed slightly and his brow furrowed as this other person dredged up difficult lines of thinking. Despite slowing, the flames didn’t catch him. They remained nipping at his heels, and he couldn’t stop to think long enough to realize that meant he didn’t need to keep moving. Creed opened his mouth to explain, but couldn’t find the words.

The memories of bodies wrapped in plastic and sealed in tunnels materialized around them. In his memory, the bodies were long dead, but here they moaned and cried. They would have screamed if they had enough air.

“I didn’t move fast enough,” he said. “Gotta keep moving.”

Well, wasn’t he a tragic soul. Running from a past he could not change into a future he could not escape. If he could, Morpheus would have opened one of the sarcophagus, but there was no need. Some things were best left to the imagination, and he did not wish to shock the other back to consciousness prematurely. “Where will forward ultimately lead us? Redemption? Forgiveness?” What was it that he sought? What was it that Morpheus could use against him or offer when the time came?

“Don’t think redemption is in the cards,” Creed sighed fatalistically. “Nor forgiveness. Pastor says all can be forgiven with love in my heart, but he’s full of shit. Love won’t make things right. No. Evil exists in this world. Evil people doing evil acts. Best I can do is justice.”

This spurred Creed forward, suddenly invigorated at the thought of seeing justice done, especially by his own hands. Some part of his mind that had been resting before awoke. “Who are you? Are you evil or a victim?”

Justice? Morpheus looked at the fires that surrounded them. No, it wasn’t justice he sought. Justice could be explained. A true thirst for justice brought peace. The dream he walked was that of a man who sought vengeance and would do whatever it took to obtain it.

“I could be your salvation or I could be the last remaining piece to your downfall.” Morpheus was vague, yet truthful. “I bring dreams and I bring nightmares. Regardless of if I were evil or a victim would you seek this justice you speak?

“All I do is seek justice,” Creed replied quickly. “Whether you’re evil or a victim just changes whether the justice is against you or on your behalf.”

“Are you evil or a victim?”

“Evil,” Creed specified with some certainty. “Victims don’t have what it takes to get justice done.”

After a moment of thought, he continued. “I expect some day, someone will get their justice against me. Then I can rest.”

His conviction, though flawed, was admirable. The passing of time did not change the fact that there were humans fated to do extraordinary things. It was impossible to tell which god had chosen the human in front of him, but one certainly had. Until he had that answer, it was best to assume it to be one of his foes. “I am Morpheus. It means naught to you now, but when you awaken, take heed to remember my name. I will give you the rest you cannot seem to find. Speak your name, human.” Be the first crack in the forces assembled against him and his fellow gods.

“Pleasure to meet you, Morpheus,” he replied, tipping his hat. “That’s a funny name. Mine’s Creed.”

Morpheus chuckled under his breath. “I’ll be sure to remember your odd name too, Creed.”

“I surely will,” Creed nodded. “I expect you’ll come to seek justice against me sooner or later. We’ll see if you succeed.”

“Perhaps. Perhaps not. There are others who I must seek justice against first.”

“Same here,” Creed agreed. “I don’t know who I seek, but I know you’re not him.”

“Until you find whoever it is you seek, continue to move forw-” Morpheus words were cut off, and he suddenly came to a stop. Something wasn’t right. Their, or more specifically, Morpheus’s plane of existence became unsteady. The ground twisted and distorted to the point where he was unsure which way was up or which way was down. The heat was replaced by the chill of ice that felt as though it coursed through his veins.

Creed was not awakening of his own free will. That much Morpheus was certain, but the dreams and nightmares were his domain where few others could freely roam. Zeus, Hades, and… “Thanatos?!” He called out demanding for the god of death to show himself, but the only response he received was the red tinted sky slowly darkening. If not Thanatos, then who possessed the power to corrupt to such an extent?

Unsure of what was happening, but knowing the descending darkness was not of his making, Morpheus was left with no other choice but to run back in the direction that he thought they had come though it was impossible to say for sure.
 

Striking a Deal​

When Creed awoke, the smell of burnt everything lingered in the air. He wasn’t quite sure where he was, but he knew that behind him everything was burning. In front of him, his Stetson lay on the dark forest floor. He tried to stand, but discovered that one of his arms wasn’t working. His breathing came ragged and it was exertion enough to crawl over to his hat. Whatever was happening, he knew he didn’t want to be around when the fire spread to where he was. So he crawled deeper into the darkness. When the feeling returned to part of his body, and he realized that the feeling was a uniform searing pain, he just kept crawling.

Creed wasn’t sure how long he crawled. It felt like hours. But eventually, with his one good eye, he saw a light through the trees ahead. It was a streetlight, implying the existence of a street. So he kept crawling until he emerged from the trees and found himself at not one street, but the intersection of two streets. A crossroad.

After crawling up to the point where the two roads met, he looked down each of the roads, but saw nothing. There just seemed to be a single streetlight at this one intersection in the middle of nowhere. Creed held onto the hope that someone would pass him by. But most of all, he held onto the hope that somehow he would find Fritz and make him pay for what he’d done.

Thankfully, Creed didn’t have to wait for long. Though he didn’t hear a car approaching, a man was suddenly crouching next to him. Or at least it looked like a man. Something about him seemed off.

“So you wanna get revenge, huh?” The man smiled down at him. He was very pale, with a thin beard that ran like a line of hair along his jawline. And he wore sunglasses despite the darkness. Something told Creed that they were to hide something in his eyes.

“Yes,” Creed croaked. Whatever had caused his ragged breathing also seemed to have fucked up his throat. His voice was now like a big stone grinding on top of an even bigger stone.

“Have I got a deal for you,” the man seemed very pleased, but also spoke with some urgency. “I can give you everything you need to hunt down those who did this to you, and anyone else you want to fuck with. But you have to act now.”

“How?” Creed croaked.

“Don’t worry about that, but we don’t have a lot of time.”

“I’m dying?” Creed asked.

“Yes, but that’s not why we’re running out of time,” the man seemed frantic now. “Someone else is coming. They’re going to stop you from taking my deal.”

“I—”

But before Creed could decide one way or another, there was a flash of light that made Creed bring his one good hand up to shield his one good eye. But the flash died quickly and when he looked again, there was another man standing above him. This second man had darker skin and was dressed in all white and almost seemed to glow.

The man in white opened his mouth and seemed to speak, but Creed heard nothing that he could parse as speech. The closest sound he’d ever heard was Gregorian chanting, like the man’s voice was an entire choir humming a harmony without words.

“I’m just playing around, Michael,” the pale man said, donning a sheepish grin. “You know we’re on the same page here.”

Michael said something admonishing.

“Yeah, yeah,” the pale man said. “Creed, I want you to meet Michael. He’s the representative from upstairs. My name is Stolas, and I’m from downstairs.”

“What?” Creed croaked.

“It will be easier if you don’t fry what’s left of your brain trying to figure everything out,” Stolas explained. “We’re here because the guy in charge upstairs thinks there’s too many gods walking around down here. Do you know what the first commandment says?”

“I am the lord thy god,” Creed managed to say, even as voice turned into more of a growl. “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.”

“A translation, but close enough for our purposes,” Stolas said. “So obviously if there are a bunch of gods running around, it doesn’t make the big guy upstairs very happy. And the one downstairs feels just about the same. I’m sure you know Lucifer was an angel and only really disagreed with the guy upstairs on a few key points.

“Long story short, we want you to cull all the extras down here,” Stolas continued. “We’re willing to give you the means to kill them.”

“If I don’t…?”

“Then you’ll die.”

Creed thought for a moment. He couldn’t stand. He could barely see or breathe. He couldn’t move one of his arms. Death didn’t sound all that bad.

“If you die, we’re pretty sure you’ll end up in purgatory at this point. You’ve done some good things and some bad in more or less equal measure,” Stolas sighed. “You don’t want to get stuck there for the rest of eternity. So instead, take our deal. Kill some gods. If you minimize collateral damage, you’ll probably go upstairs. If not…”

Stolas seemed genuinely excited now, for the first time. “If not, I’d be happy to use you in the seventh circle of hell. Maybe even get a hall pass once in a while to come up here and tear shit up.”

Michael chimed in.

“I’m just telling him his options, calm down,” Stolas clearly rolled his eyes, obvious even behind sunglasses. “What do you say?”

“Fritz…?”

“He’s one of the gods we want you to kill.”

“I’ll do it.”

Michael stepped forward and laid a hand on Creed. It wasn’t exactly like he was healed, but something burned inside of him strong enough that he was able to stand up. He could move his arm again, but when he looked down at it, he saw that it had no skin and the muscles were covered in a layer of char. Creed blinked his one good eye and gingerly brought his burnt hand up to touch his eye that wasn’t working.

Before he could, Michael gently took his arm and stopped him. Instead, Michael put a small orb into his hand. When Creed looked down at it, it was a roughly eye-shaped ball of gold with detailed inscriptions that he couldn’t read. He turned it around and around and finally saw a cross on one side. On instinct, he lifted the orb to where his eye had been and found that it fitted in nicely. There was a dull glow, and suddenly he could see again with both eyes. Better than before, even. He could see into the darkness around them as clear as day.

“Don’t let Michael convince you that you only have upstairs on your side,” Stolas seemed distrustful of Michael’s gift. “You’ll need some way to get back into Nashville.”

Stolas clicked his tongue and Creed heard a bored snort behind him. When he turned, he saw a huge black horse, the biggest he’d seen outside of the bucking broncos they bred up at the Calgary Stampede. But this was a mare, and her eyes and hooves burned with sulfur-smelling hellfire. She wore a saddle, but had no reins.

“Don’t worry,” Stolas said. “She’ll know where to go when you mount her.”

When Michael put a hand on his shoulder, Creed turned back to see that he was holding a long wooden box with more writing he couldn’t read. Creed waited, but Michael did nothing. So Creed took the initiative and opened the box.

With confusion, he pulled out a gun, holstered in a gun belt. The belt held huge rounds unlike almost anything he’d seen before.

“Grenade launcher?”

“That’s the sword of Michael,” Stolas said confusingly. “It takes its form according to whomever wields it. In your case, it looks like a grenade launcher. In reality, it’s a higher dimensional weapon and you’re just seeing a projection of it into your three dimensions.

“Of course, we can’t make you immortal. And all the might of God’s own thunder won’t be worth anything if you die before you can use it,” Stolas said as he produced a black leather riding coat, which he helped Creed step into. “This is made from demon hide, like your night mare over there.”

Creed turned to the horse, who snorted again disapprovingly.

“It’s bulletproof, but you’ll still feel the force of the bullet against you,” Stolas said, while poking Creed in his ribs to send another jolt of searing pain across his whole body. “So maybe try taking cover.”

Creed nodded, then tied the new gun belt around his waist, letting the so-called sword hang on his left hip opposite his holster, empty of his trusty old .44.

“Oh, I found this in the forest,” Stolas said, holding up Creed’s old gun. When he took his, Creed noticed that it too had illegible inscriptions on it. “Don’t bother using it on any gods. They’ll just regenerate. But it should work well enough against the followers of false gods.”

Creed had to jump to get his foot into one stirrup so he could throw his leg over his night mare’s back and sit upright in the saddle.

“List?”

“Of course,” Stolas said, lifting his hand and pointing at Creed’s uninjured arm. “Let me make sure you don’t lose it.”

A moment of sharp pain was a drop in the bucket for Creed. He flinched, and then pulled down his sleeve to reveal a list of names on his inner forearm.

FRITZ

JAX

TALLY

COLE

ZURI

VERA

ARTEMIS

HERMES

MORPHEUS

MARDUK

The list went on, but Creed saw enough names on the list that he recognized so he pulled his sleeve back up.

“Remember, everything you do tips the scales one way or another,” Stolas said. “Other than that, good hunting.”

Creed didn’t have anything to say that was worth the pain of saying it, so he simply nodded.

“The mare’s name is Ker.”

“Ker,” Creed repeated.

Ker reared up and he had to grab her mane to keep from being thrown off. She let out a bestial cry before leaping forward and tearing off down one of the roads, leaving a trail of fiery hoof prints behind her.

“How do you think he’ll do?” Stolas asked.

The choir of Michael’s voice responded hopefully.

“Yeah,” Stolas agreed.


Miles away and not much later, a national guardsman named Ralph took command of a quiet post on a rural road controlling traffic in and out of Nashville. In the hours since Ralph had been posted here, there had only been 2 people trying to cross. The first was a couple from Nashville trying to get to their cottage until things went back to normal in the city. And the second was a rancher looking for a stray goat. Ralph was happy to have such a quiet post, since he was looking forward to all this nonsense with the power outage to blow over so he could go back to his family.

That was until Ralph looked up the road and saw a man with half a face and a golden eye in the exposed skull and charred muscle that remained from half his face, riding atop the biggest horse he’d ever seen, whose eyes glowed with quiet fury.

“Evening, sir,” Ralph stammered.

“Evening,” Creed’s stone-on-stone voice replied. He held out a piece of paper as he approached the guards. “With the NSA.”

“Okay,” Ralph took the paper and read it, trying desperately not to think about the huge horse breathing smoke in his face. He unclipped the comm from his belt and dialed the local command office. “I have someone here claiming to be from the NSA, ID 186050001. Looks like a cowboy. Confirm.”

Ralph looked nervously up at the man on the horse. He could only see the skeletal side of his face with its gold eye. At this distance, he noticed that the gold eye had a cross where its iris would have been, and that cross was looking down at him. It almost seemed to glow in the dim light.

“Confirmed,” his comm squawked. All the guards at the post visibly relaxed.

“Well,” Ralph said, holding up the paper. “This all seems to be in order. Didn’t know the NSA had a mounted division.”

“We’re new,” Creed croaked, grabbing the paper. With one normal and another skeletal hand, he neatly folded the paper and tucked it into an inner pocket of his riding coat before Ker kicked out, threaded the needle between the guards at the post, and raced down the road into Nashville.
 

Wounded (and not my pride)​

They were at the end of Calvin’s driveway before Fritz took a moment to look back. The cloud of molten fertilizer was still blooming behind them, lighting up the otherwise cloyingly humid darkness of the old mining roads near Nashville, though he figured it had just about reached its apex. Much of the surrounding trees were already on fire, and as evidence he could see a thick plume of smoke that glowed orange in the firelight.

Fritz looked over at the jet black Hudson Hornet that was now driving next to him. Whatever souped-up engine Calvin had put in it screamed like a banshee. Without a thought, Fritz cranked the throttle of the old motorbike he’d stolen from the now ex-cop. The bike replied with a throaty growl and a surge of speed that made the wind bite his eyes and pulled his lips into a wide grin.

Laughing, Fritz cranked the throttle a couple more times and then delighted in leaning into long, slow swerves back and forth in front of the screaming Hornet. Looking up, he saw the plume of smoke stretching out overhead, lazily painting the night sky a deep orange red.

When his fit of laughter began to subside, Fritz lifted his pipe up to his lips and discovered that it was empty. No alcohol and no pipe weed, Fritz thought. How long had it been since he’d been sober? Guess we’ll see how strong this anti-power field was that was affecting him.








In a quiet corner of West Nashville, a tiny wooden church towered proudly over tinier wooden houses that, in their dilapidation, seemed to slump over and lean against one another and in some cases only stayed up thanks to a criss-crossing network of overhead power lines. The house lights were all out at this late hour, but the church was lit up like a beacon and hushed voices carried through the open front doors, along with the sweet smell of cannabis. Outside, a couple of figures stood to one side of the doorway. One smoked while the other talked.

“I guess it’s not really a church, is it? They took down the cross on top and inside. But it still kind of is, you know? Just not to God. At least not that god. The one with the big G. Ha! I guess she’s a big G too. I never thought about that. I always have the best thoughts when I’m outside looking up at the night sky. It’s just so quiet, right? How could you help but listen to your thoughts for once?”

“Mmm,” the smoker agreed sarcastically.

“I always used to look up at the stars and wonder about where I belonged. Or if I belonged. I have like six older siblings. My older brother got the last spot on the couch, so I slept under the dining table. It was way more comfy than I make it sound. But still, my parents’ house didn’t really have space for me. And school didn’t really have a place for me. They always seemed like they were on the verge of either sending me one grade up or down. I was pretty happy when I got to the AP stuff. I think my teachers were too. They just let me work on AP stuff in my own time. I finished a bunch in the first week, but got bored. Still not sure if I graduated.

Hey look, someone’s coming. Wow, that guy doesn’t have a face. Oh, no he does. Just half of one. His horse looks really pissed. Do you think he’s just going to sit there taking turns glaring at us and his horse? Is he talking to his horse? It kinda seems like it, but I can’t tell from here.”

“Uhh,” the smoker interjected, flicked away the cigarette, and ducked inside the church.

“Let’s talk more later! Oh, he’s getting off his horse and coming over. Hello! Are you here to see our big G?”

Creed looked down at the person in front of him. He couldn’t tell if they were man, woman, boy, or girl. They had short, curly hair and big glasses. The corners of their face were very slightly softened sharp edges, particularly their cheekbones and jawline. They had medium-sized lips and big eyes, though he wasn’t sure if it was just an effect of the glasses. A big knitted sweater and baggy yoga pants made it impossible to tell what their body was like underneath. They were also currently snorting with laughter at something funny that Creed had clearly missed.

“Sorry, I guess you would’ve had to be there. I was just telling Summer Rain how I never really belonged anywhere before I found this place. I’m not sure if I really believe what everyone says inside, but I just have this feeling that this is exactly where I’m supposed to be, you know? At least for now. Maybe something will happen and it will be time to go. Not yet, anyway.”

“Fritz inside?” Creed’s boulder-grinding voice resonated off the wall of the church.

“Fritz? Is that your name for Gaia? Everyone here calls her something different, but she calls herself Gaia, so I call her Gaia. Everyone calls me Gabby. But I don’t really call myself Gabby. I’m just me, you know? Boy, you don’t talk much. I don’t know why, but I have a good feeling about you. You look scary, but I don’t think you’ll hurt me.”

Creed stared at Gabby while they kept talking, but after some time, he gave up waiting for her to stop. Reaching down, he pulled back his sleeve and read through the names on his arm. Gaia. Creed wondered why Ker wanted to come here first, but he’d known her long enough that she wouldn’t budge until he was done here. Creed pulled out his revolver and paused. He’d fired two shots, one at Fritz, and the other at the glass jar. But he could tell by the weight it was fully loaded. He double-checked, but he was right. Out of curiosity, he pulled out one of the cartridges. It had inscriptions like those on his holy grenade launcher, but instead of crosses it had pentagrams. Something about it made a shiver go up his spine. He re-holstered it and then checked his other gun. It too was loaded. Eventually he looked up and leaned to one side to look into the church.

“You are on some kind of mission, aren’t you? Well, let me help. I’ll take you to Gaia. Just up the stairs and inside. You don’t have to be so quiet. There are people sleeping, but most are downstairs in the basement where you can’t hear anything. You know I’ve never seen a place with a basement before this, but I guess churches need a lot of extra space. I’ve only seen one place with more plants and that was our class trip to Cheekwood. I like plants well enough, but sometimes it can be a bit much, you know? Anyway, here’s Gaia.”

Creed discovered that amid the dense jungle of plants that seemed to be growing from every crack in the floorboards, walls, and ceiling, there was a woman. Plump, but on the skinnier end of the spectrum of people in most of the towns he’d been posted. Unlike Gabby, her rounded features couldn’t have been any more feminine. She was sitting cross-legged on the ground. No, slightly elevated. Like she was weightless and only crossing her legs so she could reach a sickly-looking plant that she was delicately cradling in her hands.

Oh, and she was glowing with a red outline. Creed was surprised about this, since it didn’t seem to match her green thumb aesthetic. He experimented by looking at her with each eye individually, and discovered that it seemed to be something he could only see in his artificial eye. Could his new eye see false idols? He wondered.

When Gaia looked up at him, he could tell she knew.

“You’re here to kill me.”

“Could run.”

“I don’t run,” she said as she stood. Or rather, straightened into an upright position, feet still floating above the ground. She was shorter than him, but floated up until she could meet him with a level gaze. “Humans have been killing me for hundreds of years, but I’ll outlast you all in one way or another.”

Creed let the words linger in the air. There wasn’t anything to add, but it didn’t seem like she was quite ready, so he gave her time. After a moment, Creed turned to look at Gabby who was staring, awestruck at both of them. Totally silent for the first time since Creed had laid eyes on them.

“Tell me your name before you do it,” Gaia ordered him.

“Creed.”

“I’ll remember you in my next life.”

“You won’t,” Creed said before he drew his hold grenade launcher and shot her. In the fraction of a second before it hit her, he saw the round split apart. Golden sabots tumbled away harmlessly while a central piece of steel hit her in her chest, embedding itself just below her neck. There was no bang, just a click of something mechanical triggering something that made the air crackle.

For a moment, they both stared at each other, neither really seeing what they had expected to happen. Gaia looked down and saw the tail end of the steel flechette sticking out of her chest, so she pulled it out. It was a now very-bloody cross, which she held up for him to see.

“Why?” She asked with pain in her voice not unlike someone who had just stubbed their elbow.

“Hmm.”

Creed’s eyes began to lower to inspect the gun, but he caught a single glimpse of an image before his vision went completely white and after lightning tore through the church roof. The image was a still frame of Gaia being vaporized. Her mouth was open as if to scream, but there didn’t seem to be enough left of her to make any sound. Not that he likely would have heard it over the explosive sound of the lightning.








Fritz watched as clouds gathered over Nashville. These weren’t storm clouds. If it were daytime, they might have been big and fluffy like sheep. But it was night and they were slate gray with just a faint outline of orange from the fire behind them. What caught Fritz’s eye was not the shape of the clouds, but the way they visibly assembled from various points across the horizon, forming a tight spiral directly overhead some part of Nashville.

Pulling back and to one side, Fritz knocked on the window of the Hornet and pointed at the clouds, wondering if any of the kids had any insights. As he did so, he finally noticed a throbbing pain in his shoulder. Reaching up, he touched it and then saw fresh blood covering his hand.

“That’s probably not good,” he grumbled as he carefully bit down on one sleeve of his shirt and tore it off before tying it tightly around his shoulder to slow the bleeding.

Suddenly, a bolt of perfectly straight lightning shot from the swirling clouds to the ground below.

“That's definitely bad,” Fritz frowned.








With ringing in his ears, Creed waited for his senses to return. He wasn’t unconscious, but for several moments he was blind and deaf while his sensory organs or his brain frantically tried to deal with the absolute overload of sensation. He could still feel. Pain, mostly, but that wasn’t noticeably any more than he’d felt before he’d unleashed God’s Own Thunder in an enclosed space. Aside from the pain, he felt plants and loose bits of wood from what he presumed was the ceiling that he’d seen cave in before he went blind. There wasn’t anything pressing down on him, he realized, so the entire ceiling couldn’t have come down. Unless he had been blown entirely out of the building, which was a distinct possibility.

His hearing came back first, though very slowly. He could hear screaming over the tinnitus ring. He guessed he’d woken up whoever was in the basement and they had come upstairs to get a look at the carnage before even he could.

His vision went completely dark before it started to return. He saw a dim image of a collection of long-haired hippies crowding around a crater in the ground that had once been Gaia. The one Gabby had called Summer Rain was gesticulating wildly at him, but another hippie was holding her back.

That’s when he noticed that Gabby was standing over him, still wide-eyed as she’d been before he’d brought down the lightning that had blown out every window in the building and tore a suspiciously-narrow hole in the roof. He could tell by the way her mouth was hanging agape that she was still speechless. Despite everything, she reached down and helped him to his feet.

Leaving behind the loud proclamations of violence and lamentation, Gabby gave him a surprisingly strong shoulder to lean on all the way back to his horse, and even helped him up. Although Gabby confused him, Creed still gave them an appreciative nod before clicking his tongue at Ker, who promptly refused to budge.

“It’s dangerous to go alone,” were the first clear words he heard since the explosion. Creed looked down at Gabby. “Take me with you.”

“Can’t.”

“Why not”

Creed looked at Ker in his search for words, but she just snorted a small burst of flame out of either nostril like a small dragon. He wasn’t sure exactly what she meant, but he got the gist.

“Fine,” he said and helped her up onto the saddle behind him.

“Take these,” Gabby said, reaching her hand under his arm to hold out a pair of bright pink sunglasses. “You’ll need them for next time.”

Without knowing what to say, Creed took the sunglasses and quickly stuffed them into his pocket.

Then Ker snorted again, and Creed sighed.

He put on the glasses, and they tore off into the night.
 
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