The cover shows Triton and Aegis in clearly Roman surroundings, looking at their reflections in a polished silver mirror. On the other side of the mirror, however, the reflections show an older, helmetless Derek Radner in golden armor, and a younger reflection of Aegis wearing his old EUROPA uniform. ========================================================================== . Blackbird & Countinghouse Presents: ( ) CONCLAVE OF SUPER-VILLAINS ( ) I An Academy of Super-Heroes Universe Comic I I copyright 2008 by Dave Van Domelen I with Tony Pi and Andy Burton Annual #2 - Coming Home Part 5 "Revelation" ============================================================================ PROLOGUE [June 12, 2026 - Terran News Network Newsbyte] Chancellor Derek Radner stood atop a dais of golden brick, wearing his Strafe armor while carrying the horned helmet beneath his left arm. The armor had once again been repainted, but this time the color scheme was gleaming gold against a grainy spectrum of multicolored sand, from bone white to dark grit in tide-licked waves. He seemed older, his face weather-worn. Instead of the AstroSpear, he wielded living lightning in the shape of a trident. Flanking him were the twins Cas and Pol Ierulli-Kiris, mirror images of one another. However, they were not wearing their old EUROPA costumes, nor the Swiss Guard adaptation that Cas had worn as Aegis. Instead, they wore gleaming silver armors that were sleek imitations of the Strafe design, helmless but with reflective round shields on opposite arms: Cas on the left, Pol on the right. A holographic image of a Medusa's head glowered in the midst of Castor's shield, while a Tenniel-styled Jabberwock twisted upon Pol's. "I am Chancellor Derek Radner of Khadam, Triton of the Conclave of Super-Villains, and I have seen Death and lived," he said, looking right into the camera. "Furthermore, I have not returned alone." A shadow fell over his face for a moment, heralding the arrival of a winged stag-man alighting before Derek and going down on one knee. "Peryton. Aegis. Lookingglass. Glimpse what we have wrought while the world thought us dead. Welcome to El Dorado, my hidden city of gold and wonders!" He raised his trident high while the twins raised their shields in unison. "Impossible, you say? As Lewis Carroll's White Queen advocated, one should believe in six impossible things before breakfast. But there are merely *five* impossible villains who have declared war on the Conclave of Super-Villains, and I challenge them to face our paradox. Beware, Chiaroscuro, Anhydra, Talus, Matrioshka, and your oh-so-secretive leader Never. We are coming for you." --------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHAPTER ONE [August 23, 79 C.E. - Pompeii] The shining speck that was Solar Max finally vanished over the horizon, and Jen Kleinvogel's shadowy form had been lost to sight minutes ago. Derek "Triton" Radner and Cas "Aegis" Ierulli-Kiris stood in wary silence on the mountainside overlooking the highly doomed Roman city. Derek wore the armor he had "inherited" from TwenCen villain Strafe, decorated in the colors he had chosen to represent his "ruling house" in Khadam. Cas wore the badge of the Helvetican Guard, having served the Vatican since his break with EUROPA. "Might I speak to you a moment?" Triton said in a soft voice to Aegis. "I have nothing to say to you, killer," Aegis replied. "Really? Because I have an idea on how we can save your brother," Triton said. Diplomatically, he didn't dispute the accusation. Rebus had been the hand that killed Pol, after all, but as leader of the mission, Derek could be said to be responsible. "Save Pol? You killed him in cold blood two years ago," Aegis snapped. "I still intend to see you executed for your crime, Triton." "Think about it, Aegis," Triton countered. "We are in the past. I didn't kill Pol two years ago, I *will* kill him nearly two *thousand* years from now...but there are all sorts of things we can do to ensure that the same tragedy doesn't happen in the future...provided we can get away from these do-gooders and *lightly* tamper with the timeline." "What makes you think you can do it without destroying us all?" Aegis asked. His expression told Triton that he could see the same possibility Triton had, the gaps into which a hoax could be perpetrated. But doubt remained. "Because I'm me, and I layer contingency upon contingency," Triton replied. He opened a small compartment in his armor and showed Aegis what he hid inside. It was a tiny piece of plasm. "What is it?" Aegis asked. "A piece of Myriad, a seed with which we can grow a future and fool the world," Triton said. "Trust me. I need not be your brother's killer, and we could have Pollux back, along with Peryton. Are you with me? Because if you are, we need to get away *now*." Anger and hope warred for ascendancy in Aegis's expression. Vengeance drove the young man harshly, but it only did so because of a terrible loss that Triton now offered to undo. "All right. What do we do?" Aegis said at last. "Sheath us in your invisibility, and we find a place where we can scheme in peace," Triton said. Even though Kleinvogel had departed, Aegis would retain a copy of her power for a few minutes, long enough for Triton's purposes. "Don't worry. I know enough tricks to keep them from finding us. When our preparations are done, you and I can travel back to our proper time." "What about Solar Max and Kleinvogel?" Aegis asked. "We can't strand them here!" "If I know Zachary, he will turn the sun inside out to reunite with Meteor," Triton said. "They'll find their own way back." And if they didn't, Triton would shed no tears, of course. "Then let's go," said Aegis. Triton smiled behind his faceplate. He made for a great Mephistopheles. "By the way, how's your Latin?" * * * * [October 1, 80 C.E. - Ostia] The apartment was lit brilliantly by one last spark of electricity from Derek's fingertips, and he leaned back to inspect his work. It was inelegant, and it had cost him a great deal of the functionality of his Strafe armor, but the small metal cap represented the keystone in his plan to return himself and Cas to the 21st Century. Just then, Cas entered. "Another day, another drachma. Or prutah, as the case may be," he plunked a small bronze coin on the table. The two of them were careful to take on odd jobs suitable to foreigners so that they'd blend in, but the true source of their income tended to involve judicious theft from places where it wouldn't be missed, far from Rome. But time spent on honest jobs also helped them better learn to blend in with the rest of the inhabitants, something that had come in quite handy the last time Solar Max had come looking for them...and failed utterly, despite being within fifty paces of Cas at one point. "You're just in time, I've completed the Engram Enhancer," Derek held up the skullcap. "It should let you call up the powers of anyone you've copied, briefly, but only once. After that, the pattern will be burned out. Um, sorry, no pun intended," Derek added. Cas had unwittingly been the "burnout killer" of Eurasia's equivalent of the Academy, his ability to copy and enhance powers leading to numerous accidental deaths at ASIE. The Academy's bane had been a Khadamite shapeshifter, a more powerful version of the Alpha-Rho series that had joined Derek's Conclave of Super-Villains as Myriad. "It's ready for a test, then?" Cas asked, apparently unfazed by the reference. Derek doubted the young man had really gotten over his accidental killings...he was simply too driven now by the thought of getting Pollux back to care. Derek nodded. "Pick a fairly useless power this time, obviously." "Hm, there was a Vogue Ghoul I met at the Vatican a while back, she could control and modify ceramics. She specialized in making blades that could sneak past metal detectors, came to try to get absolution after one of her creations was involved in the murder of a child. I could try making this plate stronger," Cas suggested, picking up a simple clay platter. Vogue Ghouls were Eurasia's answer to the Paragangers of Manhattan...superhumans ranging from fashionable poser to full-on psychotic, "organized" into gangs that wasted their energies on internecine struggles and partying. "Ah, yes. That would be good," Derek nodded. "And I think I can even find a use for a piece of advanced ceramics. I've been looking for a way to make sure someone gets a 'letter' from me in the TwenCen, and that would be perfect. Look, give me a few minutes to etch my message onto this plate, and try to remember as much as you can about this Vogue Ghoul." The plate in question was a simple round dinner plate, made of bisque-fired clay. Not exactly the sort of thing people used in this day and place, but Derek had made or commissioned a set of "uptime" place settings to help make the apartment feel a little more homelike. Cas pulled a still-warm meat roll from a street vendor out of his bag and chewed it thoughtfully as he wracked his brain for memories of that girl. What had her name been? Oh, yes...Sofia. At least, that's the name she'd given. Probably not her real one. She had an annoying tic, too. Kept brushing hair out of her eyes, even though she kept it in a buzzcut so there was none to fall in her face. Derek had opened up a scroll covered in unfamiliar symbols and was copying its contents onto the simple clay plate using a metal scribing tool. "Are you comfortable with my explanation of the timestream yet?" he asked as he scratched away at the plate. [For the explanation, see Derek Radner's Private Journal #4 - Ed.] "More or less. The more you teach me about quantum gravity, though, the more sense your ideas make. A sort of mix of Newtonian determinism and Fischerian observer theory," Cas replied around a mouthful of food. Fischer had been best known for his accomplishments in industrial supertech in the 1990s, but shortly before the False Rapture had made some significant advances in normaltech science by studying various pieces of Santari and Pranir technology. His accomplishments included a coherent theory of quantum gravity that had just been starting to get accepted by scientists in the 2020s, if Derek was to be believed. Of course, for all Cas knew, Derek was feeding him just enough truth in with a bunch of plausible lies designed to help him do whatever it was that needed doing. Violation Physics tended to work in the way you expected it to work, rather than the way the universe would prefer, after all. "Good, good," Derek nodded. "The observer effect isn't really that strong, not for normal people, but it's my solid place to stand. With that, and the lever of our combined Magenes, we're going to move the world. And then you'll make us a nice little warp bubble to hide in for a few millennia, and we'll wake up to a world where Pollux never really died...." * * * * [March 24, 81 C.E. - The ruins of Carthage] "Cartago delenda est," Derek smirked, looking about at ruins over a century old. "And this particular part of Carthage doesn't attract the notice of archaeologists until 2025, so it should be a safe place to bury our little time capsule," he told Cas as they carefully set the coffin down. Inside of it was most of the Strafe armor, stripped of as many systems as Derek could safely remove and turned into a long-term incubator. Cas nodded, then brushed a stray hair out of his eyes. A non-existent stray hair. "Myriad's spore, or whatever it is, and the bags of nutrient broth we packed into the armor...they'll keep for nineteen hundred or so years?" "Or more, if needed," Derek beamed. "The Strafe armor is a miracle of preservative technology, designed to keep its wearer alive for years at a time with no ill effects...it's why PsidF/X wanted it so badly that he made the fatal mistake of betraying me. [In CSV #11 - Ed.] For a hardier life form such as the Alpha Rho series, its power core will suffice for an estimated *ten* millennia of minimal life support. And once the timer ticks over, it'll bring the spore out of stasis, feed it up to maturity and program it with the lessons I provided. Since she's purely an example of advanced normaltech, Myriad should weather the TwenCen with ease. The armor may blip a few times, but it's not a living supernormal, so it'll be immune to the big vanishing in 1998...and I made sure it had plenty of T!rir upgrades before I started wearing it around Rebus," he chuckled. Rebus may have been a powerful Anchor, but the insectile T!rir race's advanced technology was purely mundane, if impressive. "A pity we'll have to go the rest of the way on sail power," Cas sighed, looking down at the coffin. "But the Engram Enhancer's effects don't last long enough for me to fly us, and the rockets couldn't be safely removed from the suit." "True. At least I took care of all my errands to other parts of the world before converting the armor. And it should still be intact when we get home, so I can convert it *back*," Derek grinned. "Let's get digging. The sooner we have this hidden, the sooner we can take our cruise to Ibiza!" * * * * [April 2, 81 C.E. - Ebesus] After the final Punic War, the Carthaginian trading outpost of Ibossim had settled down and become the sleepy Roman backwater of Ebesus, more or less isolated from the main Roman shipping routes and left to a sort of benign neglect in the shadow of nearby Maiorica's thriving olive industry. For the most part, this suited Derek's plan perfectly...the odds of one of the era's few living mages being on the little island were negligible. On the other hand, while fairly cosmopolitan as a result of its mixed heritage, the island got relatively few new visitors, and neither Derek nor Cas wanted to stand out. Hence, they were now skulking through the small port community during predawn hours rather than disembarking their ship like normal passengers...this alone might be cause for remark, but fewer details would be attached to it. "This feels like the right place," Derek called a whispered halt to the pair's movements, then withdrew the Engram Enhancer from a chamois pouch at his belt, handing it to Cas. "Obviously, the landmarks changed some over the centuries, but we only need to be within a few miles for the warp bubble to be popped." In January 2025, during a particularly raucous bachelor's party for Derek on this resort island, an attempt at revenge on the supervillain would lead to a rather significant gravitational disturbance. [See CSV #24 - Ed.] Significant enough to disrupt what Derek planned to be a sort of spacetime "embolism" that would hold him and Cas safely outside the ravages of time for centuries. He knew from the example of Q'Nos [in ASH #43 - Ed.] that in addition to freezing his personal timeline, it would also protect him from the big vanishing act of 1998. Cas nodded, putting the metal skullcap on his head and making sure the Engram Enhancer's electrodes were making good contact. He then extracted a few devices from his own belt and strapped them to his forearms. One he ignited with a SNAP-hissss to display a sizzling energy trident. "You sure you want me to have this? You're a lot better with trident weapons." "That's why I can't use it," Derek shook his head, motioning for Cas to extinguish the weapon. "I modified its look as much as I could without hurting the functionality, but one of my once-and-future teammates is bound to figure out who I am if I'm swinging a trident weapon around. I have a few other secondary systems I can use if there's nothing waiting for us there." He pulled on a Secutor's all-concealing round gladiatorial helmet and sighed. "I really hope my little time capsule works out so I'm not stuck using this tin can. With your beard and deeper tan, I doubt anyone will recognize you if we happen to arrive right in front of people, but there's going to be people there who know me far too well to be fooled by anything short of total concealment." "I can't say I'm all broken up at the possibility of having to fight past your Conclave," Cas said, carefully not facing Derek so that his expression remained hidden. "I wish I could really cut loose, though." Derek shrugged. "If we want the timeline to remain intact, it has to be survivable for everyone. And if you kill Angel, to hell with the timeline, I'll throttle you myself, even if I have to team up with my past self to do it. Understood?" "Understood. Are you ready? I'm as prepared as I'm likely to get," Cas warned. Secretly, Derek was far from worried that Cas would go on a vengeance trip. In fact, he was much more concerned about the opposite...that Cas would try to arrest them all. The Engram Enhancer had been demonstrating certain personality-copying side effects, and given whose powers Cas would now be imitating, that spelled all kinds of potential trouble. However, he said none of this. "Let's go," was his only reply. Cas nodded, turned on the Engram Enhancer, and used the powers of JakZak "Solar Max" Taylor to seal the two of them into a warp bubble where they would pass the next one thousand, nine hundred and forty-four years, give or take a few months.... ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMISSION [Late October, 1996 - Chicago, IL - Museum of Science and Industry] Jennifer Blair hummed tunelessly to herself as she examined the ceramic plate in her hand. She had no way of knowing how many hands had held this plate before it wound up in hers, and that was only thinking of people in contact with it after its discovery. Before being uncovered in Italy a few months before, there was no telling at all. Only, she somehow suspected it was fewer than most people would have guessed. As Jennifer began to flip the plate over in her fingers again, a knock at her office door brought her out of her reverie. Diane, one of Jennifer's colleagues at the museum, was leaning inside the door, smiling. "So, today's the day, eh?" she asked. "We finally get to meet the mysterious fiancee, and it only took, what, one of the most baffling historical mysteries of our time." Jennifer shook her head, but Diane continued. "If I'd known that's what it took, I'd have buried some monkey bones for you to find." "Ha, ha, ha," Jennifer replied in a playfully sardonic tone. "If I'd known my love life was worth throwing scientific history into flux, I'd have invited Cameron sooner to save the world from you." Jennifer set the ceramic plate down on her desk. "Does that mean he's here?" Diane nodded. "Downstairs just called to let us know we had a visitor." Jennifer got up from her desk and joined Diane outside her office. "Don't be surprised...or offended, actually...by Cameron. He's a teddy bear, but sometimes...." Diane clapped Jennifer on the shoulder. "If you like him, that's all I need to know," Diane said. The moved down the corridors, toward the elevator. A moment after they arrived, the doors to the elevator slid open to reveal Cameron McKay and his robot, Prototype. Diane let out a small yelp of surprise when Prototype stepped out of the elevator, extending its hand to her. After she realized it wanted her to shake, she looked at Jennifer and, through a withering grin, said, "But you could have warned me about the robot." Jennifer looked at Cameron. "Yes, you could have warned me you were bringing Prototype." Diane shook Prototype's hand, which was more claw than anything. It seemed to please the robot, and he backed up toward Cameron. Jennifer couldn't help but think of Prototype as "he" even though the robot's own creator insisted on "it". Prototype just seemed a little too...well, too much like his creator for Jen to consider him an "it". "Did I forget to mention it?" Cameron asked. "Sorry. When you, ah, said there was something you wanted me to look at, I, uh, just figured I should bring Prototype's sensor package to see it as well." "Is it safe to assume you thoughtfully removed his weapon package?" Jennifer asked. As Cameron fumbled for an answer less blatantly deliberate than, "No," Jennifer stepped forward gave him a quick peck on the check, taking his right hand inside her left. "In that case, let's get back to my office before anyone says anything." * * * * After introductions had been made between Cameron and Diane, Diane had taken off for home. It was already late in the afternoon when Cameron had arrived, and the floor where Jennifer had her office was almost empty. "So, they just found this in a dig?" Cameron asked. He was examining the plate, feeling the etched symbols with his fingers. "Yeah, it was found at an Italian site, in Ostia. The location really doesn't tell us much, because most of the people there figure it had been moved around area before it finally got buried, given that Ostia was Rome's sea port," Jennifer explained. "The date of the midden stratum was sometime in the first century, which puts it almost a couple of millennia ahead of the technology required to make a ceramic that hard. And it was probably made centuries before the layer in which it was found. Plus, it's a style of plate not really in common use until much later." Cameron nodded absently. "Which is why you got it," he said. "Which is why we got it," Jennifer agreed. "Some think it may be one of the earliest surviving artifacts of people with a Magene, at least leaving aside 'magic items' that have defied analysis." Jennifer's tone caught Cameron's ear, and he looked up at her. "Some? But not you?" Jennifer winced slightly and nodded. "It's the etchings," she explained. Cameron's fingers traced the etchings almost unconsciously. "They're in Linear A, an ancient Minoan script that was dead centuries before the archeological layer this was found in. We wouldn't even be able to read it now if not for the efforts of a time-viewing supernormal." "So, what does it say?" Cameron asked. Jennifer shrugged. "There's only two characters: Do- and De-. Which is why I thought of you 'Do-ctor De-veloper,'" she replied. Cameron rubbed his chin. It made sense...as much as anything made sense when dealing with the paradoxically unknown. "If it's a message for me, though, why not just use my name?" "That's the thing. I think the message may be for you, but I don't think Do- and De- are the message," she explained, "That's probably just there to get your attention. And Linear A doesn't have the right syllables to completely spell out 'Doctor Developer' anyway." "I suppose it worked in getting my attention," Cameron said. When Jennifer showed him which character corresponded to which sound, he began trying to find a pattern in the spiraling characters. The more he looked at it, though, the less it made sense. It was like trying to read off a spinning tire. "Prototype," Cameron called. His robot woke up from its hibernation mode and stepped over from the corner. "Scan this," he said, aiming the side with the characters at Prototype's camera-eye. With a quick double check, he tapped his right pointer finger on the outer-most character. "When you're done, start here, and show me all the characters in a straight line." Prototype beeped his acknowledgement. "He understood all that?" Jennifer asked. "I've been working on refining its voice recognition software and trying to build up its dictionaries," Cameron explained. "I may have to repeat that command, but hopefully it got the idea." Then, with a slightly bitter tone, Cameron added, "I'm sure Doc Droid or Pragmatician would call it primitive..." Before Jennifer could say anything, Prototype beeped. He turned away from the plate and faced one of the empty walls in Jennifer's office. From just below his camera-eye, Prototype projected an image of the plate. After the plate was projected, the characters on the plate began it glow, each one in turn as Prototype mapped them out. Every few seconds, the plate would grow larger; allowing the two humans watching to see just how far down the characters went. "There must be thousands of those," Jennifer gasped. "How could someone write so much with only two characters? What kind of text it that?" "It's a program," Cameron exclaimed. "Ones and zeroes, Do-'s and De-'s. Someone wanted me to find that, because they knew I'd recognize the binary." Jennifer was about to ask a question, but Cameron beat her to the answer. "I must have sent it to myself. At some point, I must get sent back in time, and this is some kind of message in a bottle. I knew you'd see the plate, because...you'd already seen it...from my perspective." "Maybe," Jennifer said, biting her lip as she thought back to her own, recent time travel experience. That binary message might be like one of Sam Zimmerman's programmable spells, a message left somehow as a way to bring Cameron back from the past. Or not. "What if it's a trap?" she asked. Cameron chuckled, "Why would I leave a trap for myself?" Prototype finished mapping the characters just as Cameron finished his question. Once the characters were displayed in properly formatted columns on the wall, Cameron spoke to Prototype. "Compile those characters into a binary file, using the first character as 1 and the other as 0." Moments later, Prototype made a harsh beeping noise. "Okay, use the first character as 0 and the other as 1," Cameron replied. Tense moments passed, and after a while, Prototype seemed to go slack. It didn't fall over; rather its arms and torso simply went limp. The display light shining on the wall winked out. "Is that normal?" Jennifer asked. "No," Cameron mumbled. He stepped around to Prototype's front, trying to get a better look at the robot. Just as he knelt down, Prototype sprang to life. Its limp arms went rigid and slammed into Cameron, sending him crashing into the wall. Jennifer hesitated for an instant, trying to decide whether she should move Cameron or attack his robot. Moving Cameron was the choice she decided on, but before she could react, a blinding light shone in her eyes. She realized it was Prototype's projector, but it did her no good knowing it. As she moved to shield her eyes, she felt a solid burst of energy impact against her stomach, which sent her reeling. Another blast hit her squarely in the chest, and almost instantly the blinding light in Jennifer's eyes was replaced by darkness. * * * * As consciousness slowly returned to Jennifer, she became aware that something was trying to pull her apart by her arms. It wasn't doing a very good job, a fact she attributed to her naturally increased strength and durability, but it was still kind of annoying. At first, Jennifer thought she was lying down with her arms splayed out, and that whatever was pulling on her was doing so from the ground. However, as her eyes slowly opened, and she saw the marble floor of the museum below her feet, she figured she was standing up. When she saw the cords tied around her ankles and waist, she decided, no, in fact, she wasn't so much standing up as she was being held up. Once again she felt the tugging on her arms, only this time, she decided to tug back. Two quick yanks and not only did the tugging stop but she also heard someone moaning, or grunting, at her. That was the first time she noticed who was also being held up across from her: Cameron. Upon seeing him, the pieces immediately fell into place. Each was thoroughly tied to their own support column in the museum, held in place at the ankles, waist and chest...assuming her predicament mirrored Cameron's. Their arms were pulled out to their sides, connected by some sort of cord that had been wound through an adhoc pulley system. Even if her strength was enough to dislodge the rope, it would either rip Cameron's arm off or break whatever museum pieces the rope was looped through. Cameron had been the one she felt "pulling her apart," and in hindsight she realized that was likely the only way he had of getting her attention. Whoever had restrained them...and her most likely suspect was Prototype... had ensured they weren't going to be calling for help, by way of what looked on Cameron and felt on her face like an entire roll of tape. Each. She watched Cameron for a moment, trying to see if he was attempting to pass on any information. The only message she could decipher from his hangdog expression was what she already suspected: they were in for a long wait. * * * * The robot known as Prototype made his way through the docks, using his built-in radar and motion sensors to avoid detection. Both of those systems kept him safe and free from unwanted attention as he traveled across the city, collecting several items he was programmed to gather as he made his way to the docks. The docks had not been programmed specifically, but they ended up the most logical choice after reviewing several alternatives. Prototype was in no hurry to reach his destination. The only priority was to avoid detection. That seemed best served by stowing away on a cargo vessel, rather than trying to pass himself off as luggage on an international flight. When he was sure it was safe to move, Prototype bolted toward one of the anchored ships, keeping the sack of supplies slung over one shoulder in place with his arms. He would still need to get on the ship, but according to the manifest he'd downloaded earlier, this was the ship that would take him, eventually, to his final destination. This was the ship that would take him to Ibiza. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHAPTER TWO [January 23, 2025 - Ibiza, Eurasian Union] On one heartbeat, it had been a sunny spring early morning, nearly silent and filled only with the faint smells of effluvium to be expected from a small town in Roman times. On the next, it was colder, darker...and much louder. "Good, we're close enough to Klub Klastik to lose ourselves in the chaos," Derek prompted, motioning for Cas to follow him as he pressed a button on his wristband. "No, Triton." Derek froze. "Oh crap. You think you're him, don't you?" While the device rummaged around for the faint sense memories of old "borrowed" powers in Cas's mind and enhanced them to the point where he could use those powers one last time, the Engram Enhancer also seemed to overwrite Cas's personality with his memories of how the power's original holder acted. Normally, Derek wouldn't mind that Cas shared his opinion that Taylor was a self-righteous twit, but it looked like Cas was living that particular nightmare now. "You've evaded Justice for long enough, Triton," Cas reached out and started to increase gravity around Derek, making it difficult to move. And difficult to not laugh, the way he practically pronounced the capitalization of "Justice". "It's time you were returned to your old cell, murderer." "No, it's time we got out of here before we damage the timeline," Derek countered. "Or have you forgotten that we're still in our own past, by a little over a year? You try putting me in a cell and there's going to be an awfully confused version of me wondering why from the comfort of Skyhaven." Cas paused, conflicting personas momentarily at war. "Oh, for..." Derek sighed. "Prototype, stun him," Derek ordered. "What?" Cas started to turn, only to see a crudely humanoid robot holding a shimmering net in its claw-like hands. Before Cas could do anything more, though, Prototype beeped and threw the net over the confused meta-mirror, stunning him into silence. "Come on, Prototype, we need to get out of sight. The girls will be here in short order, Nextasie isn't that far off, and I think they'll decide that an exploding night club is good enough reason to violate the evening's 'treaty lines.'" * * * * "Ugh," Cas grunted. "What hit me?" "Directly, a stunner net, courtesy of one of the TwenCen's weirder villains," Derek explained. "I had to knock you out until the Engram Enhancer's effects could fade a little, you'd decided you were some parody of Solar Max and insisted on bringing me to justice." Cas shook his head. "I...vaguely remember that. And I can still feel him rattling around the back of my brain, demanding I do the Right Thing and damn the consequences." "Certainly sounds like the JZ I know," Derek smirked, then pulled on a reproduction of the Minuteman's helmet. "It looks like the dinner plate message got through, at least, grab yourself some costuming pieces, we can use plan B. Take the stunner net, it'll complete your theme, Retiarius." Plan B was to pose as gladiator-themed Vogue Ghouls, Secutor and Retiarius. Plan A had been to pretend to be time-displaced actual Romans, gabble in Latin exclusively, and then try to make it look like they'd gone back to their own time as a cover for escaping...but given that Glyph was around, it'd be a much harder sell. Poser Vogue Ghouls, on the other hand, were easy. They infested Ibiza like so many superpowered pigeons, and tended to change costumes and codenames faster than hemlines could rise and fall in the mundane fashion world. "Interesting," Derek activated the short tube in his hand, and a bright energy blade sprang out. "A working replica of Brightsword's laser torch. Or, more likely, an actual Santari artifact. I guess Prototype got brought to the Museum of Science and Industry rather than Lady Lawful bringing my trap disk to Doctor Developer. Is that right, Prototype?" The robot beeped affirmatively. "Good job finding us gear in their collections, then. This helmet's a lot better than the one I would have been stuck with otherwise. Cas, you ready?" 'Retiarius' had put on what Derek recognized as a copy of the first Brightsword's mask and gloves to go with his otherwise Roman outfit. "I'm not stripping down to a loincloth for authenticity," he added. "That's fine," 'Secutor' nodded. "Vogue Ghouls aren't exactly noted for their careful research skills anyway. Let's go...if we can make it to the port before they seal it off, we might be able to get off Ibiza without a fight scene. Angel never did tell me what happened that night...this night...but that doesn't mean we were involved." Like Murphy was going to let them off that easily. * * * * "You two!" Sultry commanded imperiously, gesturing at Derek and Cas. She apparently didn't consider Prototype worthy of her notice. "What has happened here?" "Klub Klastik hat geboominated, chere," Cas grunted in rough street Eurolac. The less words Derek had to say, the better his own disguise would hold. "Nada left, we like'n t'vamanos. STRAFE gerumored." With that, the trio tried to keep heading for Ibiza Town's port before it got hopelessly jammed with fleeing partiers. "Not so fast," TerraStar cocked a blonde eyebrow. "The earth tells me you're more than just witnesses to the event." Derek curled a lip in annoyance behind his helmet. Polla, the TerraStar, was still pretending to be merely a geomantic at this point, but he'd found out a few weeks down this particular timeline that she was a full mage, hiding the extent of her powers. Her actual talents were still unclear to him, given how events had unfolded in the wake of her attack during his upcoming wedding. That had made her a wildcard, and it looked like her mystic senses were able to tell that he and Cas had been inside a warp bubble, or were otherwise displaced in spacetime. Zephirah was limited to what she could prepare in advance, and he knew from having asked her about this night's events in the future/past that she hadn't been able to "pack" any relevant spells. However, he also knew that the ladies refused to give details about exactly what happened that night [in CSV #24 - Ed.], implying that it had been deeply embarrassing. As embarrassing as being taken down by two punk Vogue Ghouls and their tinkertoy, perhaps? Pressing a button on one of his wristbands, 'Secutor' hissed to Prototype, "Execute genetic override, Lanista!" Naming the robot their "manager" had been a spur of the moment decision, and Prototype wouldn't actually respond to the new name yet. However, it didn't actually need to execute any commands in this bit of misdirection, and there was a danger in using *any* Third Age name carelessly. Myriad's human form dissolved into a mass of threshing tentacles as she got his signal...for this wasn't the Myriad everyone expected. Not anymore. Or, not purely, at any rate. Deep inside her was buried a one-shot override, a piece of her future sister/daughter that would control the Khadamite genetic experiment completely for the next few minutes before being used up and absorbed harmlessly into Alpha Rho 14's body. The Alpha Rho series used genetic memory rather than a centralized brain, and Derek had equipped his proxy with a "back door" of sorts, for her to infect her older sister with. The "how" didn't really matter, as long as it got done...and it had. Zephirah and Spiral, unprepared for a surprise assualt from behind, were knocked out instantly by a sudden onslaught of octopus-like tentacles grabbing them around their necks and hurling them in opposite directions. That left only Sultry and TerraStar to deal with. And it also explained Spiral's "hickey", Derek noted. "Timor' the Kraftbosculator of Retiarius!" Cas shouted, hurling the stun net over TerraStar while claiming in nigh-impenetrable Eurolac that it was a power scrambler. Over two meters tall and full of muscular might, she probably would only have been moderately annoyed by the net's built-in power, but Cas used the distraction it provided to mirror-twist Polla's abilities with his own power. It was nowhere near what Caprice's power could have done, but the unexpected amplification of talents she had been hiding for the previous several months stunned and distracted her as mystic energies burst out from her eyes and fingertips, searing the ground and blasting several nearby buildings. Sultry, he had insisted on dealing with himself. As much as it pained him to have to assault his own once and future wife, Derek knew that Cas might take a little too much pleasure in the job. Fortunately, one of the weapons he'd salvaged from the Strafe armor was a little device he'd come up with to deal with his wife's occasional temper tantrums. It had never been used, although that one time in Monaco he'd been tempted...but he knew it would work. After all, he'd built it. Swinging deliberately wide with his hissing power sword, Derek then shoved Sultry off her feet with the flat of his forcefield shield. Before she could recover her balance and lash out at him with a lightning bolt from the rapidly darkening skies, Derek unleashed the alpha wave scrambler pulse from his wristband. It instantly sent her into a dreaming state while not actually knocking her unconscious...but she still dropped like a puppet with her strings cut. In normal sleep, the body and brain disconnect so that actions taken in dreams don't act out in the waking world, and Angeline had never been prone to sleepwalking. And just like that, with only a few seconds' worth of actions, the distaff side of the Conclave of Supervillains had been neutralized. True, they would recover within minutes, if not seconds, but that was all the opening Derek, Cas and Prototype needed in order to vanish into the Mediterranean night. But first, Derek pulled off his helmet and gave the waking/dreaming Sultry a deep, passionate kiss. "Are you sure that's a good idea?" Cas asked. "Maybe not, but I couldn't resist," Derek grinned, pulling the helmet back on. "Let's go," he added, easing Sultry back to the ground and taking off at a sprint. "Well, we know my proxy was born successfully," Derek said once they were well out of range of the mystic light show Polla was involuntarily providing. "Manage to copy anything that will let us get off this island fast?" "I think I can cast a flight spell that should get us to Mallorca before the mirroring fades," Cas nodded. "TerraStar has a truly frightening amount of power!" "Which is why I had to dump her in a warp bubble at my wedding reception [in CSV #25 - Ed.]," Derek nodded. "Well, let's go, then. Hopefully the rest of the plan went as smoothly as the Myriad sleeper cells did," he smirked. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ INTERMISSION [December 31, 2023 - Over the ruins of Haven] Pollux was drowning in the deeps. Not only had his link with Castor been severed by the Conclaver in the "Labyrinthe" armor, but his faceplate had been torn away. He couldn't hold on to his remaining air, and he would never reach the surface in time to take another breath. Pol felt the seawater choking the life out of him, and caught a last glimpse of his brother buoyed towards the surface by a sudden mass of ice. At least Ymir gave Cas a chance to live.... To his surprise, translucent tentacles darted through the water from behind him, binding his arms and legs, and dragged him down and away from the undersea battle. He struggled to no avail, helpless as the pseudopods pulled him past a very familiar floating body...*was it his own*? There was barely time for Pol to register what was happening, as the tentacles sealed him inside a coffin-like contraption. Water inside the tight space quickly subsided as the interior was filled with air. The tendrils squeezed his chest and forced the seawater from his lungs, letting him cough and breathe again. But still he could not sense Cas or the thing that had rescued him with his mind. Was Cas dead? All he knew was that the creature was with him here in the darkness. Could it be a foul, leftover experiment from the Third Age heyday of Haven, or another villain? "CONCLAVER!" Pol shouted and struggled, guessing at his foe's allegiance. "Release me!" "If I release you now, you drown as you originally did, Pollux," said a raspy voice behind his ear. "I did not become the snake that devours its own tail only to let you die. Now, if you will keep an open ear and listen to what I have to say, all will become clear." Though he could not read the creature's intent, Pol grudgingly acknowledged that were it not for this stranger's intervention, he would indeed have drowned. "Who are you? What are you? Why can't I sense Cas!" "Questions, questions, questions," the voice said. "For the answers, I am but a proxy, a friend sent by your brother Castor, or rather, your brother in his future guise as Aegis, who was stranded in the past. I know, the temporal dynamics are confusing, but trust me when I say, I act in Cas's stead to ensure that you never died in this timeline. That body you saw will convince the world, however, that you are dead. My apologies for the psi-jammer...it simply will not do if you alert the current version of Cas that you are alive. You might fracture the timeline further with myriads of paradoxes." The creature chuckled unnervingly at some private joke. The mere idea of time-travel was overwhelming, but the lessons in temporal mechanics at the Institute made Pol quite aware that "Proxy" could very well be telling the truth. It made his head hurt, even more so without his once-constant contact with Cas. "Why should I believe you?" "For a start, I can quote you everything said at your eulogy, to be held four days and nineteen hours from now," Proxy said. "I will also tell you about the truth behind the ASIE burnouts, and the tragedies that have shaped your brother's life since your death. He needs you, Pollux of the Dioscuri, more than you know. Save him from himself." * * * * [January 8, 2024 - A train passing into Switzerland] Pollux ignored the scenery flashing past the train window, knowing what he would see in a few seconds. He glanced at his watch again, a habit he hadn't been able to break since January 5th, the day of his funeral. It was 1642h, which meant the Vogue Ghouls would come in sixty seconds. Proxy's predictions hadn't been wrong yet. The shapeshifter sat in the seat next to him knitting a blue baby's sock, engrossed in her role as his buxom and very pregnant wife. However, her belly did not truly hide a child, as one might expect...at least, not in the strictest sense of the word. Yes, there was a second brain gestating within, a blank slate meant to host a copy of Peryton's mind. It was the only way to save the Conclaver, Proxy said. Less than a year from now, Rebus would betray the Conclave of Super-Villains and implement a scheme to become a living god, and Peryton would be among the sacrifices powering the rite. It was an execution that Triton sought to prevent, but even a shapeshifting clone would not fool Rebus's genius. The true Peryton must die, but it did not mean that a copy of Viktor Von Wright's consciousness could not survive the death of the original. Pol could never perform an exact copying if he was working with a normal brain, but Proxy's artificially-grown blank made a total transfer possible. It wasn't the same as saving Peryton for real, but to do anything more drastic would stress the timeline, perhaps even let Rebus succeed in his ascension. Pol shuddered. Rebus had almost killed him...*had* killed him. He could not risk letting that bastard gain the unopposed powers of a god. As for why Cas was working with Triton, of all people, that was the one thing that Pol had the most trouble understanding. In a way, though, it was all Pol's fault that his brother fell into darkness. If he had been there for Cas, Cas would not have inadvertently killed their fellow students at the Institute, used Emp to grasp at power he lost, gone into service for Vatican City, or risked an alliance with Triton in order to save him. ++It's odd,++ Pol communicated telepathically to Proxy. ++When we were growing up, my brother and I couldn't get away from the spectre of the Dioscuri myth. I was supposed to be Polydeuces, the immortal one, and he the mortal. Cas was always afraid his fate would mirror the brother in the myth, and die before me. Whereas I, I always dreamed I would somehow save Cas from death one day, and like in the myth, share my 'immortality'. It's like we've been through the lookingglass, and now his myth is mine and vice versa.++ --How true. Knit one, purl two. 'Lookingglass' might even fit you as a new handle,-- Proxy thought back. She continued to knit. Pol mulled it over. ++Aegis and Lookingglass. A polished shield and a mirror. Not bad.++ --Focus on the task at hand, purl three,-- Proxy warned. --You must be ready to copy Peryton's mind at the exact moment of the derailment...casting off...because that's when their Anchor will drop his guard.-- She put her knitting down. --There. Done.-- A man rushed past them in the aisle, cursing in "street" Eurolac. Pol recognized Hotspur even through the man's own disguise: they'd spent plenty of time together at ASIE before Harry had gotten himself nearly tossed out on his ear for brawling with Vogue Ghouls. The hot streak of polyglot profanity was as distinctive as a fingerprint. Apparently the man had gotten his temper sufficiently under control to be allowed back into the program. Oni was supposed to be on the train as well, likely manifesting as a magnetic ghost already. He had to be careful, especially with Oni - what if her astral projection sensed him? That could be disastrous. Still, Proxy was right. There was a job to do. Pol lowered his head and scratched at his false beard as he opened his mind cautiously. He sensed the four Vogue Ghouls, and tapped into their trains of thought. Elektroschock, a living taser. Doppelgang, the regenerating man who could duplicate himself. Irrlicht, human will-o'-wisp and future Conclaver. Strecken, the stretcher. Pol couldn't help but notice the similarities of Elektroshock's power to Triton's, and Doppelgang and Strecken's powers to those of Proxy. In any event, he watched through their eyes as Elektroschock and Doppelgang took on Hotspur atop the prison car, while Strecken and Irrlicht dealt with the EUROPA agents inside. As much as Pol wanted to stop Strecken from using his elongated limbs to strangle Agent Sharma, once again Pol found the need to preserve the timeline prevented him from acting. He just wanted this pretense of death to be over with, but that couldn't happen for nearly two and a half years. And now, he was about to put Peryton in the same straitjacket. Pol watched through Strecken's eyes as Agent Krieger, the Anchor, locked himself in the polymer cube with Peryton. There was no way to read Krieger's mind while he pushed his Anchor field to cover the entire cube. That field also prevented Pol from reading Peryton's mind, but Hotspur would be an unsuspecting accomplice in dampening that field. As 'scripted', Hotspur melted a ring beneath the feet of those on the roof seconds before they entered a mountain tunnel, sending himself, Elektroschock and the twinned Doppelgang into the prison car. Strecken shot his arm forward and began to strangle the newly-arrived Hotspur, while Pol touched Hotspur's mind and shoved aside all other thoughts in the man's head except de-linking and derailing the prison car. Hotspur likely would have come up with the thought himself, but Pol wanted to be 100% sure. Sure enough, Hotspur focused his powers and melted the connection between the train and the last car, then melted the wheels on the prison car and the rails beneath them into slag. The train derailed, throwing Krieger against a polymer wall, disrupting his concentration. Pol took that opportunity to reach into Peryton's mind and execute a total download of the Conclaver's entire identity, executing the process as quickly but as safely as he could. When he was certain that the Peryton's pattern had successfully been copied onto the blank brain, he gave it a nudge into self-awareness. Deprived of its sensory input, the new Peryton brain panicked, of course. ++I know you can't sense anything right now, Viktor, but Triton says this is the only way to rescue you from certain death,++ Pol communicated to the copied mind. ++Sleep now, and wait to be reborn. Then all will be explained to you.++ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHAPTER THREE [February 22, 2025 - The Amazon Basin] "Okay. I'm officially impressed," Derek said as he took in his surroundings. "I'd really only been hoping to help one of the tribes weather the centuries and have some fond memories of me that I could leverage into a ready labor force," he admitted. "But this goes WAY beyond my expectations." "This" was an immense artificial cavern carved into the bedrock deep under one of the many tributaries of the Amazon River. A gleaming golden city filled the space, and an artificial holographic sky made it seem like it was up on the surface. And, at the center of the brick-floored plaza in which they stood, there was a gleaming golden statue of Triton with the engraved motto, "Improve yourselves. Hide away. Wait for me, I will return." "I am pleased that you approve of our works," the city's Coordinator bowed slightly. Like all the people aside from Cas and Derek himself, the Coordinator was of native Amazonian stock. Even Proxy had taken on the look of the locals. But unlike the residents of the small village on the surface that concealed the entrance to the city, he wore the latest in tasteful business attire. "Approve?" Derek grinned. "I'm ecstatic. My very own hidden city of gold? It's like Christmas. Well, okay, it's your city," he conceded, "and you're a lot more tuned into the world political situation than I'd expected you to be, but am I correct in assuming that you'd like to ally yourselves to Khadam?" The Coordinator nodded. "A century ago, we might have welcomed you as a living god," he admitted, "but despite our isolation we couldn't help but start picking up telecommunications signals once the outside world reached that level of technology. And while we could hardly have been described as backwards at that point, I do believe we were somewhat...naive. Our first contact with European explorers was almost disastrous, in fact, and we were forced to relocate the entrance to our city and detonate a goodly section of tunnels to ensure that we weren't found again. But now that you have returned as promised so many generations ago, we may now repay our debt. Consider the city of El Dorado your steadfast allies." Cas blinked. "El Dorado? Isn't this the wrong part of the world for that name?" He was still a bit shellshocked at the whole experience, and distracted by the promise that Pol would arrive soon. The Coordinator chuckled. "It took us a long time to realize what it meant. The Wise One," he nodded to Derek, "included a number of myths and legends along with his lessons on science and civics, including the legendary city of gold. It was the name we supplied to our first visitors, on the grounds that it *was* a legend, and no one would believe him. Or so we thought. It turned out that it was a legend people were willing to believe if it meant getting their hands on gold," the Coordinator shrugged. "Like I said, we were naive. Perhaps if the media player that had been gifted to our tribe had lasted a few more centuries we would have had context for the subtler lessons contained on it, but it took too long for us to reach that level of technology, and the original records were lost forever." Derek nodded. "Hey, like I said, you did a lot better for yourselves than I'd thought possible." He turned a slow circle, again taking in the city around them. "This is *so* 'Zeroth Age,'" he smiled. "An entire technologically advanced city under the heart of the Amazon, populated by people who revere me, if not actually worship me. So cool." "I'm glad you like it," the Coordinator replied, slightly wryly. "And Proxy has explained your situation, regarding time travel. You're welcome to our hospitality for as long as it takes to avoid 'doubling' yourself, and our most prominent citizens have been eagerly awaiting the chance to talk to you...scientists, philosophers, even artists. But there's two people who have the first right of meeting, even if they haven't been waiting quite as long," the Coordinator touched his earlobe, apparently triggering a switch on some communications implant. "We're ready," he said to an unseen person, then gestured to one of the buildings bordering the plaza. Derek and Cas turned to the opening door. "Viktor!" Derek exclaimed with delight as a handsome European man stepped out first. The body Proxy had grown for him did not have the full shapeshifting range of Proxy's own, but it could still let the new Peryton switch between his old monstrous form and a fully human body. Cas, for his part, said nothing aloud, and almost froze up. But telepathically, it was a torrent of greetings and regrets and reminiscences and, finally, forgiveness as his mind reached out to Pol's. By the time his brother emerged onto the plaza, tears filled the eyes of both. "Definitely a good day all around," Derek grinned as he clasped Viktor's hand in his. * * * * [August 27, 2025 - El Dorado, Amazon Bazin] "How's that?" Derek asked as he finished one last adjustment on the robot once known as Prototype. "Satisfactory, sir," it replied. "Internal diagnostics confirm that the upgraded software is still compatible with my legacy hardware." "Good, good," Derek nodded, closing the access ports one by one. "It's been an interesting challenge, bringing you up to speed without using any violation tech or alien hardware...fortunately, your original creator is still around, and I was able to get my hands on some of his more recent work. Still, while most of the core pieces were his, you're not really Prototype anymore, are you? I think I'll call you Dr01d-2, how's that?" "Satisfactory, sir," came the response. Derek frowned. It still needed something, some spark of personality. "If only people could be upgraded as easily," Pol said from the doorway. "And to save you asking it, no, my brother isn't really getting any better. Being reunited with me has at least stopped more damage from happening, but..." he held up his hands in a helpless gesture. "The Engram Enhancer did that much damage?" Derek furrowed his brow, Dr01d-2 forgotten for the moment. Pol paused, thoughtful. "Yes and no. I think it was more of an excuse than anything else, though. My 'death' was hard on him, and to find out so soon after that he'd also killed so many of our classmates by accident, well, it set him up for some serious mental disorders. Between his drive for revenge against you and what I can only guess was some heavy-duty counseling at the Vatican, he managed to paper over the worst of it for a long time. But once he agreed to your time-twisting plan, all sorts of unresolved things started to come unraveled, which I think expressed itself as his..." Pol paused, casting about for the right word, "it's not a dissociative disorder, not exactly, but that's the closest thing I can think of from the psychology courses I took at ASIE," he shrugged. As a telepath, he'd gotten mandatory training in that area, but as a field agent it hadn't been a priority once he got past the basics. "You said it's not getting any worse, at least?" Derek said, hopefully. "Will he be able to hold out until we can come out of hiding next year? I shudder to think what might happen if he goes out and meets himself while in a psychological state not covered in the textbooks." "I honestly don't know," Pol admitted after an uncomfortable pause. "Psychologically, I'm a field medic at best. My telepathy gives me better tools than most, but I'm really only trained to deal with damping immediate shock and trauma, so people can get out of danger and to real help. And your sealed society here seems to have selectively bred out a lot of the worse psychological problems...and no, I don't really want to think of how harshly they must have dealt with issues like claustrophobia in the early years, even given the safety valve of the fake village up top...so while they're pretty advanced in most sciences, they're pretty lost when it comes to mental health services. Kind of like how you wouldn't have much use for dentistry if everyone was bred to be immune to tooth decay." "Which they seem to have managed too," Derek noted. "I think they found a fungus that kills off the relevant bacteria, actually." "Whatever. The point I'm dancing around is...I love my brother, but I don't think I can do much more than keep him stable for now. And as long as he doesn't want to leave my side, he's got too much telepathic talent for standard methods to help much, since he'll see all the intent in the therapist's mind and get a sort of 'nocebo' effect. I'm only talking freely now because I know you keep your workshop psi-shielded, on top of that portable jammer you built into your armor." "Yeah, that didn't win me a whole lot of points with Cas, but at the same time I don't want either of you having free access to my brainmeats," he tapped the side of his head. "My secrets are some of my most potent weapons, and a secret shared is a secret weakened. Even one shared with a mirror." Pol blinked. "Mirror? Did Proxy tell you about the 'lookingglass' comment I made on the train last year?" Derek shook his head. "Maybe I'll explain it in depth later, if I decide you're someone I can trust in the role. In short, though, every villain needs someone to keep him grounded, a mirror into whom he can look and see his own flaws. I know you're only staying here because leaving too early could derail the timeline, but maybe once you *can* leave, you'll choose *not* to." "I'm not joining the Conclave of Super-Villains, Radner," Pol frowned. "And neither is Cas." "Not asking you to," Derek smiled. "The world needs more defenders, not fewer. And yes, for all my posturing, I consider the Conclave to be defenders of the world as well...if only to preserve it for ourselves. But consider recent events! A war between the Moslem Confederation and your own Eurasian Union. China fragmenting. The return of the World Serpent and the rise of an entirely new global power in the form of that minotaur. Your brother burned too many bridges...is burning them even now, outside these walls, to return to EUROPA, and I doubt you'd go back without him. So why not pick a different side? El Dorado has no supernormals, and thanks to the exaggerated rationality they took from my 'helpful hints', they haven't had any for generations. Once we go public, they'll need defenders against things that their technology can't stop. And, frankly, the Conclave is already big enough for what it needs to do. Why not create your own team, here in El Dorado? Friendly to me, naturally. But not under my command, any more than the Conclave is anymore." "Your offer is tempting," Pol admitted, "as you no doubt spent quite some time thinking of how to best present it to me. Of course, I have at least a half a year to think it over, so you'll understand if I don't give you an answer now." "Naturally," Derek nodded. "And consider suggesting it to Cas yourself. I think he's really been looking for something to protect, if you'll excuse my utterly amateur psychoanalysis. Why else name himself Aegis?" * * * * [April 15, 2026 - El Dorado, Amazon Basin] Several of the feeds Derek was watching went dead, as all normal communication from inside Monaco was cut off by the mysterious timeline splitting that had interrupted the Prix Ultime [In ASH #77 - Ed.]. Soon, his past self would walk semi-knowingly into the trap that had stranded him in Roman times, healing the damage currently being done to spacetime...he hoped. Once that happened, those feeds would theoretically come back up, giving him more visual information. Until then, the passive gravity sensors lining the tunnels of El Dorado would have to be enough. Nor was he alone in the observation room. Both Cas and Pol were watching, each hoping for different reasons that everyone in the fractured timeline would survive its reintegration. Viktor was present as well...for all his bluster on the subject, he had come to consider Conflicto his friend, and the fact that Derek knew him to be dead in at least one of the four strands of Monaco's timeline [See CSV #27 - Ed.] worried Viktor. "Okay, starting to get data on the time split," Derek announced, looking at one of the many screens displaying abstracted scientific information. "When I triggered this trap, the leading theories were that it was an uncharacteristically not-horribly-killing-me plot by Rebus, or that TerraStar was trying to free her body from the warp oubliette in Monaco and was just being messy about it. The years I've had to think about it haven't really suggested any new suspects, but I'm more firmly convinced that Rebus isn't behind it." "Especially since you're not dead here either," Pol noted. "Exactly," Derek nodded. "If Rebus had managed to return to the mortal plane, he would have known there were two of me, and couldn't resist doing something nasty to at least one of us. Even if he needed me alive for some plan or other, he'd know there's a spare. Viktor, what's your take on this?" The angularly handsome German furrowed his brow. "Why are you asking me?" "I want to get your uncluttered perspective on this," Derek replied. "Oh, so you want an idiot's opinion," Viktor sighed. Derek shook his head. "You've got brains enough in your head, Vik, even if you prefer to come across as either a vapid model or a mindless beast. But what you don't have is the kind of twisty way of thinking that I come to naturally, and that both Cas and Pol have picked up over time. We'll tend to miss the forest for the trees, because we're already thinking of how we can finish the cabinet we'll make from the logs milled from the trees we've decided to chop down. So...what do you make of this forest?" Viktor thought for a moment, apparently mollified. "I agree, Rebus wouldn't have left you alone. For that matter, he might have gone after me, on the off chance that my being alive would somehow affect the ritual he cast last year. But I don't think it's TerraStar either. There's loads of ways to pop one of those..." "Oubliettes," Cas supplied. "Right, oubliettes," Viktor nodded. "A lot of ways to pop them that don't require this level of...overkill. Either splitting Monaco has to be a goal in itself, or whoever's behind this is playing for such high stakes that this is a *small* side effect. Okay, you can't completely discount the idea that they're being stupidly flashy and risking the end of the world just to show off how great they are, but TerraStar has always struck me as wanting to keep her cards hidden. And these people are showing off the ten, jack, king and ace of spades, daring us to assume they don't also have the queen." Derek nodded. "Good, I was thinking about the same thing. I think we have an entirely new player or set of players at the table in Monaco, to be honest. No one I know about who *could* do that," he gestured at the feeds showing a mirrored dome where Monaco once stood, "*would* play things this way. If there's another copy of Doublecross around it might fit his style, but he's never been strong on gravitics. And, unfortunately, nothing in the data so far is pointing at anyone else we know about. That means we're not going to be able to just pop up hale and hearty as soon as my past self goes into the dome." "Why not?" Cas asked, stress fracturing his voice noticeably. "We need to use the time loop to our advantage," his brother replied. "As long as we don't reveal ourselves, our unknown enemy thinks me and Viktor dead, you and Triton stranded. If we just jump out there now, we lose a potentially vital advantage." "I know you're itching to get out there," Derek nodded to Cas, with the unspoken addition, "to see if Arc is okay." "I'm not eager to let my wife think I'm dead, but we don't know what capabilities our foes have. If they have a telepath, for instance, they might be eavesdropping to see if any of our comrades know if we survived." "We also need to know if the city should build additional defenses," Pol added. "If they're willing to split Monaco, they'd certainly have no qualms about carpet-bombing the Amazon Basin if we decide to reveal the existence of El Dorado...." Silently, everyone nodded agreement, and Derek went back to monitoring the gravimetric data. A few hours later, no one was any happier with the situation, but they shared a grim determination. "I'm done hacking the DSHA systems," Derek announced, "and the data I've dug up confirms my suspicions. Whoever these four are," he gestured to freezeframe images of Anhydra, Talos, Chiaroscuro and Matrioshka, "they're not from our time. The splitting of Monaco has components that clearly match readings taken from temporal incursions during the 1990s." "As if we needed that data," Pol pointed to a Terran News Network feed showing a dinosaur rampaging through an Italian city. "Time has definitely been broken." "Yes, but the new information supports a hypothesis I've been mulling over," Derek countered. "These people are not from *our* future. Not anymore. They're from a divergent timeline, and they were trying to connect our timeline back up to theirs, for some reason. They must believe in a more linear flow of time than I do...and they could be right. There may only be room in reality for so many divergences, and if one falls below a certain level of viability it simply ceases to exist. So they were trying to keep their own future alive at the expense of whatever was going to come of ours." "Does that make them heroes or villains?" Viktor asked, ignoring the metaphysics and getting to the important question. "What it makes them," Derek grinned ferally, "is *competition*. And we can't reveal ourselves until we know more about them...." * * * * [June 12, 2026 - El Dorado, Amazon Basin] "...and I promise I'll tell you everything soon, Angeline," Derek said, all alone in the communications room. The others were all getting ready for the big broadcast, but he hadn't wanted his loved ones finding out about his survival from that. They deserved to hear it from him directly first, if only "first" by such a short time that it wouldn't compromise any operational security. "Assuming the Impossible Five don't respond to my return by immediately nuking the entire Amazon Basin or something." "I'll hold you to that promise even if they do reduce half the continent to slag," Sultry replied, the glimmer in her eyes portending an evening of passion...both the good kind and the bad kind, as was often the case with his literally tempestuous wife. "Make sure everyone gets and reads the files I sent. Especially Eugene and Yvan." "Why them?" Sultry asked. "Eugene because he's still enough of a little kid at heart to not want to do his homework, and he needs to know about everything I've dug up on our rivals from the future. The Impossible Five have been spreading out while you all were kept busy by the temporal fallout of the Monaco incident, recruiting 'franchises' from the sort of people we'd really rather have on our side than theirs." Fortunately, one of the people *was* on Derek's side, a mole in the Impossible Five franchise. But that wasn't something he was going to mention over anything but the most secure of channels, which this wasn't. "And Yvan because, well...I have a bad feeling about Chiaroscuro. And I think it's going to be a personal matter for Yvan." "Very well. Have fun boasting to the world, dear," Sultry smiled wryly, as if she were sending her husband off for a night of bowling with his buddies. Then again, given their family, it wasn't a bad comparison. Let Joe Sixpack keggle...Derek's social circle was more about the game of global politics. And he was aiming to pick up one hell of a spare in a few minutes. "I'll see you soon," Derek promised again, then signed off. Noticing a stray lock of hair in his reflection on the now blank screen, he patted it back into place before leaving the room. After all, he had to look his best for the cameras. Cas and Pol, in their new El Dorado-crafted armors, were already on the "set" in the city's central plaza, newly built from gold-infused ceramic bricks some distance from the statue of Triton. Peryton waited out of camera to dramatically swoop down when his cue came. Derek flexed his gauntlet, feeling its new circuitry almost as an extension of his own hand, and sent current into it. Waveguides based on reverse-engineering the Santari power torch that had once been Brightsword's weapon shaped the electricity into a roiling trident shape, and he nodded approval. The rest of the armor's reconditioning had been a simple matter...even two millennia of sitting in the ground hadn't done irreparable damage to the otherworldly artifact. Nestling his helmet under one arm, he took his mark and looked into the camera. "We are hooked into Terran News Network feeds," the El Doradan tech confirmed. "Live in three, two, one...." "I am Chancellor Derek Radner of Khadam, Triton of the Conclave of Super-Villains, and I have seen Death and lived...." =========================================================================== This story featured.... Derek Radner Triton Electrical generation, super-science Cas Ierulli-Kiris Aegis Magene Mirror Pol Ierulli-Kiris Lookingglass Telepathy Alpha Rho 15 Proxy Shapeshifting Viktor Von Wright Peryton Monstrous strength, wings Prototype Dr01d-2 Non-supertech AI-driven Robot Guest-Starring: Cameron McKay Doctor Developer "Normal" Inventive Genius Jennifer Blair Lady Lawful Super-strength, speed, durability Angeline Croft Sultry Weather Control Alpha Rho 14 Myriad Shapeshifting Anna Kirova Spiral Telekinetic Torque Polla TerraStar Geomancy Zephirah Reuben Glyph Magical Sigils ============================================================================ Credits: Andy Burton wrote the first Intermission. Tony Pi wrote the prologue, most of the first scene of Chapter One (adapted from CSV #28), and the second Intermission. Dave Van Domelen wrote everything else. ============================================================================ Authors' Notes: Andy: Gracious thanks go to Dave and Tony for letting Lady Lawful and Doctor Developer be a part of their story arc. It's an honor and a privilege to have a chance to be a part of something like ASH, CSV, etc. It's also pretty darn fun, too! Tony: As a writer, sometimes you leave plot points unresolved when you write them, for a reason even you don't even know at the time. That was the case with the Bachelorette Night on Ibiza, when the women of CSV never revealed what happened to them that night. When Dave suggested one way for Triton to return being a warp oubliette that needed to be popped, he originally planned for it to happen at Angel Falls during Triton and Sultry's wedding. However, I realized that the Bachelorette Night provided a much better opportunity, and we were able to finally explain what happened. Cool synchronicity. Revisiting past scenes was also fun in a 'Back to the Future' way. Dave: For those who don't recall it, "street Eurolac" is an aggressive blend of various European languages adopted by youths of lower socioeconomic classes as slang, largely seen in the dialogue of EUROPA member Hotspur. There was a lot of forced relocation in the hard years following the "Godmarket Crash", and kids often ended up in mixed national and ethnic groups during their formative years. Official Eurolac is a much more orderly attempt at a single official language for the Eurasian Union, and the gutter pidgin is mainly called Eurolac in mockery of the official language. Eurolac is also what happens when you have linguists in the authorial corps. ;) Cas himself was channelled into ASIE and its predecessor programs quite early, though, and is not a "native" Eurolac speaker, picking up only a little from Hotspur...fortunately, faking it is almost as good as really knowing street Eurolac, given its nature. However, this faking is why he uses "Kraft" for (supernatural) power, rather than the more generally accepted "Feuer" (literally, fire). That, and I liked the sound of "Kraftbosculator" better anyway. El Dorado was originally going to be just a modest thing, a small surviving tribe with legends of the "horned one" (the Strafe armor has horns) who could be used to give Derek a "Castle Zemo" sort of lair in the Amazon. But in mulling over how they might retain memories of him for 1900+ years and also not get nailed by the Godmarket Crash, I considered that maybe they'd become rational scientist types by 1998 thanks to some lessons left behind on a media player in 81 C.E. by Derek...and it snowballed from there. Obviously, El Dorado has a very large target painted on it. Either the Impossible 5 don't know about it, and will try to eliminate it as an unknown variable, or they DO know about it and will try to co-opt it as soon as possible. But there's a danger in having them act too quickly, as there's a rather annoying cliche in a lot of SF/F stories: whenever the protagonists get a useful new thing, it gets sacrificed or destroyed very quickly to avoid upsetting the status quo. Stargate Atlantis is particularly horrible in this respect. "We got a hive ship! And, um, had to crash it into something. We got an Ancient warship! And it blew up. We found a spare ZPM! And have to devote it to some plot device right away, using it up entirely. We have a way to cure the Wraith! But it's only temporary." That sort of thing. So I'd rather not have El Dorado go boom too quickly, thanks. ;) Finally, Tony doesn't want to toot his own horn, but in addition to being a Writer of the Future winner, he has a story up for consideration in Canada's "Prix Aurora" F/SF competition, called "Metamorphoses in Amber". It can be found at http://www.abyssandapex.com/200710-amber.html (it's no Prix Ultime, but at least there's a much lower chance of getting split into four distinct timelines). Derek: I'm not an author, although this is to a large extent MY story, so to the extent that any of us can be considered the author of our own fate, I'm an author on this tale. I'd just like to thank those who voted for me in the 2007 RACCies and helped me win "Favorite Villain/Antagonist". And if you didn't? Then you chose...poorly. ============================================================================ For all the back issues, plus additional background information, art, and more, go to http://www.eyrie.org/~dvandom/ASH ! To discuss this issue or any others, either just hit "followup" to this post, or check out our Yahoo discussion group, which can be found at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ash_stories/ ! There's also a LiveJournal interest group for ASH, check it out at http://www.livejournal.com/interests.bml?int=academy+of+super-heroes ============================================================================