experimenter73
Super-Earth
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2021
- Location
- Maine, United States
Maise Yazzie smiled as she entered the lounge. To her, the room felt downright opulent, with plush leather couches and a massive curved flatscreen television. On the screen, an epic battle played out, the hidden speakers in the room making it seem as though she were in the middle of the action. She shook her head, laughing aloud.
"I don't think laughter is what the director was going for, Shawnee," another voice spoke, breaking Maise's reverie.
"Oh, sorry!" Maise responded. She hadn't realized there was anyone in the room, the sight of Jade curled up on the couch obscured by its high back. Of course, Jade wasn't the other girl's real name, just as Shawnee wasn't Maise's. Though they were all beginning to get to know each other here in the training facility, their true names and identities were carefully guarded secrets. Not that it really mattered to Maise. She didn't have anything to hide or anyone to protect. "I didn't mean to intrude. I'll let you watch your show."
"No need for sorries," Jade replied, turning to kneel on the couch and look back at Maise. The other girl offered a broad smile, the expression seeming to dominate her freckled cheeks. Jade flicked off the television and the room plunged into silence. "I wasn't really watching it anyways. So what made you laugh?"
"All of this," Maise answered, offering a nervous smile. "I mean, a week ago I was a cashier for a sporting goods store, getting by with a little extra from guiding tourists out on the river. And now, I mean, it's just so different."
"I know, right?" Jade's smile broadened even further. "It's amazing. Unbelievable. You're a bona fide superhero, training in a secret base to use your powers for good. I can imagine that's a pretty big shock."
"Yeah, the biggest," Maise sighed. "One minute I'm checking out a customer at the store, the next minute the place is filled with that strange gas and then I'm watching the world go by in slow motion. Unbelievable is the right word."
"That's so cool," Jade nodded. "Is it like that now? The whole slow-mo thing, I mean?"
"Oh no," Maise shook her head. "I realized pretty quick how exhausting it is to keep moving like that. That's why they brought me here to train. Right now, if I do it for longer than a few seconds, I end up panting and ravenous."
"But, oh, the things you can get done in those few seconds. I saw you finishing up in the training room yesterday. I'm so jealous of the last part, by the way," Jade giggled. "It must be nice to eat whatever you want."
"You'd think that, but I'm learning it's more of a curse," Maise chuckled. "Eating ten thousand calories sounds like fun until you've got to shovel that much food into your mouth every day."
"I'd still take it, anyways," Jade shrugged. "Of course, I'd go bankrupt on pizza."
"Another perk of being here. I'd have never been able to afford the grocery bills on my old paycheck," Maise smiled, a little more genuinely. "If it's not too personal, what kind of abilities did that storm thing give you?"
"Nothing," Jade grinned.
"Nothing?" Maise furrowed her brow. "Then why are you here?"
"This is why I'm here," Jade answered, pulling a heavy tome out of her leather satchel and placing it on the back of the couch. The book appeared ancient, yellowed pages tattered and peeking out from around its edges. Maise could see that the book didn't even close properly, the pages within seeming to strain out against the buckled strap that held it closed.
"A book?" Maise asked.
"It's more than a book," Jade grinned more broadly. "Believe it or not, it's a spellbook. I know what you're thinking. Magic's not real, right?"
"Well, I guess I can't rule anything out after what's happened to me," Maise answered, trying to hide the skepticism in her voice.
"Trust me, I thought the same thing, probably more so than most," Jade spoke softly. "I was a street magician, you see. So I knew how to see through every fake's attempts. Then I find this book, see, and I start reading through it. The next thing I know, I'm making magic. Real magic."
"Magic? Like, what kind of -" Maise began to ask, but she was cut off by the sight of the television turning back on of its own accord. She immediately recognized the red-flashing screen it displayed. This was a base-wide call for help.
Jade sprung up from her seat to turn and face the television, appearing for a moment to be the one blessed with superhuman speed. Maise saw that the other girl was wearing a short blue Kimono, hugging the form of her slender body and tied in place with a . The outfit stood out in stark contrast to Jade's Irish features, frizzy red hair and pale skin complementing her freckles.
"Attention Sentinels," the base computer system's voice spoke through the speaker system. "A level six incident is occuring at Tinder Manufacturing. Lightly armed militants have taken administrative staff as hostages and are demanding concessions from the local government." The picture changed from the warning screen to show the interior of an office building, a grainy picture seeming to be from security camera footage. A group of men and women huddled in the center of the room on their knees, faces pressed to the floor. Around them, a half dozen men in black swat-style gear brandished pistols on the hostages. "The militants have threatened to begin shooting hostages 13 minutes from now if their demands are not met."
"Damn, that's horrible," Maise said softly. "With the Sentinels elsewhere, I guess the local police will just have to take care of it."
"Local police?" Jade turned to face Maise, her mouth open in shock. "You've got to be kidding me. People are going to die! We've got to do something."
"Us?" Maise gasped. "I only just started training. Nobody wants me running out to take care of something like this. Besides, I'd be so tired I'd be worthless by the time I got there."
"You wanted to see what the book does, right?" Jade grinned. "Well, here's your chance. I can transport us right into that room we saw on the video, then you can take it from there."
"Take it from there?" Maise asked.
"I saw you with the training bots yesterday, remember?" Jade narrowed her eyes. She unbuckled the strap holding the book closed and it seemed to spring open on its own. Maise thought she could see a faint glow emanating from the yellowed pages. "Don't play coy with me. We both know those thugs won't stand a chance. We can do this, Shawnee. It's why we're here. We're heroes, and those people need us."
Maise could feel her heart pounding in her chest. Jade was right. She could handle those men. She could save the lives of those poor civilians. She could be a hero.
"Give me a minute," Maise answered quickly.
Closing her eyes for just a moment, Maise felt the world slow around her. If she was going to go deal with this problem, she wasn't going to do it in jeans and a t-shirt. Leaving a wake of air in her path, she sped out of the room to her quarters. In a flash, she was out of her plainclothes and changing into the costume that the organization had supplied to her.
It had seemed strange to her when she had first met with the organization public relations department. She'd never thought that superheroes would have to consider such things, but in retrospect it seemed like an obvious thing to consider. With her Native American background, they'd decided on the codename Shawnee for her. It represented her heritage, which made her happy, and made her feel a connection to her warrior ancestors.
She pulled on the supple, laced leather leggings of her costume and then slid her feet into the soft suede ankle boots, decorated with fringe at their tops. She replaced her bra with a simple strapless one and then laced into the matching suede bodice, fringed at the bottom like her boots and laced on the side like her leggings. The final touches were a pair of fringed bracers for her forearms. The costume left her arms and a section of thigh bare, the leggings similar to thigh-high stockings. She had expressed some reservations when it had initially been presented to her, but apparently it had done "quite well" in the team's focus groups. She had to admit that it was extremely comfortable and performed its job well.
As she ran back to Jade, Maise made the final touch, drawing her jet black hair back into a long braid that reached the small of her back. She could see the look of shock on Jade's face when she skidded to a stop in front of her, just finishing the braiding. While it had felt like she had been gone for at least ten minutes to Maise, she knew that the actual time elapsed was closer to that many seconds. She panted slightly from the exertion, but gritted her teeth.
"Let's go," Maise said, trying to sound more confident and bold than she felt.
"Yeah, let's do this," Jade grinned in response, nodding. "The teleportation can be a little disconcerting, but I'm going to land us right in that room. I'll do my best to shield us, but I'll be relying on you to take care of those goons. Got it?"
"Got it."
Holding the open book in one hand, Jade began to gesture with her other. She spoke, softly at first, words that didn't seem to make any sense to Maise. It wasn't like listening to someone speak in an unknown language, though, she realized. There was more to it. There seemed to be something wrong with the words themselves, as if they could not possibly be understood. It was as though the words themselves were just wrong.
And then the world around them began to swirl, colors running into each other as though melting. When they began to reform, Maise could see the room from the surveillance footage beginning to appear around them. For a brief moment, she stared at her surroundings in wonder. Could magic really be real?
"No, please don't!" A woman's voice screamed, abruptly yanking Maise back to reality.
"Time's up," a man's voice answered.
The office workers were still in the center of the room, all but one of them on their knees with faces pressed against the tile floor. Five masked and armed men stood around the ring, while a sixth held the last coworker by her hair, the barrel of his gun pressed against her head.
"Shaw-" Jade began to exclaim. Before she could finish the word, Maise was in motion. Fuelled by fear for the crying woman, she exerted every ounce of power that she could muster. The room seemed to stop as she darted forward. She barrelled into the shooter at full speed, grabbing his arm and easily yanking the gun away from the woman and then driving her shoulder into him to send him flying. The impact threw her off balance and she dove forward as she fell, holding tight to the gunman as she landed and then throwing him into the wall at the other end of the office.
"-na!" Jade finished as Maise slipped back into normal time when she hit the ground hard, knocking the wind from her.
"What the fuck?" one of the other militants exclaimed as her first target hit the wall hard across the room in an explosion of shattered cubicle and office supplies.
Maise went wide-eyed at the explosive boom of a gun firing, the sound seeming to fill the room. Mind still reeling from the unexpected and jarring return to regular time, she sped up as quickly as possible, but her power came reluctantly. Scanning the room quickly, she felt a moment of relief when she saw that the shooter was aiming at her. And then the sight of the bullet approaching dismissed the majority of that relief. She didn't have enough speed yet, she realized. There was no way she could speed up fast enough to dodge the bullet.
A flash of red appeared in the air just before the bullet impacted her chest, and Maise watched in wonder as it melted away to nothingness. Darting back up to her feet, she felt her speed increasing quickly and spared a glance back at Jade to see the smile on the other girl's face. Magic was definitely real, Maise realized, and it disintegrated bullets.
On her feet, Maise began to run in earnest. She could see that the men were beginning to slowly turn to bring their guns to bear on her. Even after a long, eventful week of practicing with her superhuman ability, she was still amazed by what she could do. With her opponents practically standing still, she ran from one to the next, yanking guns out of their hands to throw them across the room and out of harm's way. As she disarmed each, she hit them hard, aiming for the ballistic armor that shielded their chests and then watched in satisfaction as they went flying across the room away from her.
As the last man was flung away, Maise released her power and skidded to a stop in the center of the room. At once, exhaustion struck. She had never used her powers to this extent before and, as such, she had never experienced the level of exhaustion that struck her now. At once, every muscle in her body seemed to lose its strength and fail her as her lungs burned with the effort of drawing in air. She fell hard to her knees and then forward onto her hands, barely able to keep herself in even that position as she panted.
"Shawnee!" Jade exclaimed, running through the crowd. "That was amazing!"
"G-get," Maise groaned, "get th-them out of here."
"Everybody out," Jade ordered. The sorceress muttered more of those magical words and then a beam of magic lit the room and simultaneously opened the exit doors.
Maise struggled to recover, lifting her head to watch with satisfaction as the terrified hostages ran from the room. They, at least, weren't trampling eachother. Jade came to Maise's side, squatting down to help lift her up onto her feet, leg muscles trembling as she leaned in heavily on the smaller girl. She could tell that Jade struggled with the effort of holding her up and began to make their way toward the exit.
"You did it, Shawnee," Jade whispered excitedly. "Now let's go let the-"
Maise heard it first, the sound of a puff of air and then the clanging of something metal against tile. She tried to call up her power, but it was like trying to draw water from an empty well. Turning, she saw the source of the sound as a spinning canister bounced across the ground toward them, expelling green gas. Jade released her, pulling out the book again. Maise tried to take a step toward the bouncing cannister, but only succeeded in falling to her knees once more.
As Jade began to speak, the cannister reached them, filling the air around them with its gas. The scent of it reached Maise, surprising her that it smelled almost sweet as it reached her nostrils. At once, her vision began to swim and what little strength she had began to leave her limbs. By the time she hit the floor in front of her, she was too groggy to feel the impact. She blinked her eyes once, and then was asleep.
"I don't think laughter is what the director was going for, Shawnee," another voice spoke, breaking Maise's reverie.
"Oh, sorry!" Maise responded. She hadn't realized there was anyone in the room, the sight of Jade curled up on the couch obscured by its high back. Of course, Jade wasn't the other girl's real name, just as Shawnee wasn't Maise's. Though they were all beginning to get to know each other here in the training facility, their true names and identities were carefully guarded secrets. Not that it really mattered to Maise. She didn't have anything to hide or anyone to protect. "I didn't mean to intrude. I'll let you watch your show."
"No need for sorries," Jade replied, turning to kneel on the couch and look back at Maise. The other girl offered a broad smile, the expression seeming to dominate her freckled cheeks. Jade flicked off the television and the room plunged into silence. "I wasn't really watching it anyways. So what made you laugh?"
"All of this," Maise answered, offering a nervous smile. "I mean, a week ago I was a cashier for a sporting goods store, getting by with a little extra from guiding tourists out on the river. And now, I mean, it's just so different."
"I know, right?" Jade's smile broadened even further. "It's amazing. Unbelievable. You're a bona fide superhero, training in a secret base to use your powers for good. I can imagine that's a pretty big shock."
"Yeah, the biggest," Maise sighed. "One minute I'm checking out a customer at the store, the next minute the place is filled with that strange gas and then I'm watching the world go by in slow motion. Unbelievable is the right word."
"That's so cool," Jade nodded. "Is it like that now? The whole slow-mo thing, I mean?"
"Oh no," Maise shook her head. "I realized pretty quick how exhausting it is to keep moving like that. That's why they brought me here to train. Right now, if I do it for longer than a few seconds, I end up panting and ravenous."
"But, oh, the things you can get done in those few seconds. I saw you finishing up in the training room yesterday. I'm so jealous of the last part, by the way," Jade giggled. "It must be nice to eat whatever you want."
"You'd think that, but I'm learning it's more of a curse," Maise chuckled. "Eating ten thousand calories sounds like fun until you've got to shovel that much food into your mouth every day."
"I'd still take it, anyways," Jade shrugged. "Of course, I'd go bankrupt on pizza."
"Another perk of being here. I'd have never been able to afford the grocery bills on my old paycheck," Maise smiled, a little more genuinely. "If it's not too personal, what kind of abilities did that storm thing give you?"
"Nothing," Jade grinned.
"Nothing?" Maise furrowed her brow. "Then why are you here?"
"This is why I'm here," Jade answered, pulling a heavy tome out of her leather satchel and placing it on the back of the couch. The book appeared ancient, yellowed pages tattered and peeking out from around its edges. Maise could see that the book didn't even close properly, the pages within seeming to strain out against the buckled strap that held it closed.
"A book?" Maise asked.
"It's more than a book," Jade grinned more broadly. "Believe it or not, it's a spellbook. I know what you're thinking. Magic's not real, right?"
"Well, I guess I can't rule anything out after what's happened to me," Maise answered, trying to hide the skepticism in her voice.
"Trust me, I thought the same thing, probably more so than most," Jade spoke softly. "I was a street magician, you see. So I knew how to see through every fake's attempts. Then I find this book, see, and I start reading through it. The next thing I know, I'm making magic. Real magic."
"Magic? Like, what kind of -" Maise began to ask, but she was cut off by the sight of the television turning back on of its own accord. She immediately recognized the red-flashing screen it displayed. This was a base-wide call for help.
Jade sprung up from her seat to turn and face the television, appearing for a moment to be the one blessed with superhuman speed. Maise saw that the other girl was wearing a short blue Kimono, hugging the form of her slender body and tied in place with a . The outfit stood out in stark contrast to Jade's Irish features, frizzy red hair and pale skin complementing her freckles.
"Attention Sentinels," the base computer system's voice spoke through the speaker system. "A level six incident is occuring at Tinder Manufacturing. Lightly armed militants have taken administrative staff as hostages and are demanding concessions from the local government." The picture changed from the warning screen to show the interior of an office building, a grainy picture seeming to be from security camera footage. A group of men and women huddled in the center of the room on their knees, faces pressed to the floor. Around them, a half dozen men in black swat-style gear brandished pistols on the hostages. "The militants have threatened to begin shooting hostages 13 minutes from now if their demands are not met."
"Damn, that's horrible," Maise said softly. "With the Sentinels elsewhere, I guess the local police will just have to take care of it."
"Local police?" Jade turned to face Maise, her mouth open in shock. "You've got to be kidding me. People are going to die! We've got to do something."
"Us?" Maise gasped. "I only just started training. Nobody wants me running out to take care of something like this. Besides, I'd be so tired I'd be worthless by the time I got there."
"You wanted to see what the book does, right?" Jade grinned. "Well, here's your chance. I can transport us right into that room we saw on the video, then you can take it from there."
"Take it from there?" Maise asked.
"I saw you with the training bots yesterday, remember?" Jade narrowed her eyes. She unbuckled the strap holding the book closed and it seemed to spring open on its own. Maise thought she could see a faint glow emanating from the yellowed pages. "Don't play coy with me. We both know those thugs won't stand a chance. We can do this, Shawnee. It's why we're here. We're heroes, and those people need us."
Maise could feel her heart pounding in her chest. Jade was right. She could handle those men. She could save the lives of those poor civilians. She could be a hero.
"Give me a minute," Maise answered quickly.
Closing her eyes for just a moment, Maise felt the world slow around her. If she was going to go deal with this problem, she wasn't going to do it in jeans and a t-shirt. Leaving a wake of air in her path, she sped out of the room to her quarters. In a flash, she was out of her plainclothes and changing into the costume that the organization had supplied to her.
It had seemed strange to her when she had first met with the organization public relations department. She'd never thought that superheroes would have to consider such things, but in retrospect it seemed like an obvious thing to consider. With her Native American background, they'd decided on the codename Shawnee for her. It represented her heritage, which made her happy, and made her feel a connection to her warrior ancestors.
She pulled on the supple, laced leather leggings of her costume and then slid her feet into the soft suede ankle boots, decorated with fringe at their tops. She replaced her bra with a simple strapless one and then laced into the matching suede bodice, fringed at the bottom like her boots and laced on the side like her leggings. The final touches were a pair of fringed bracers for her forearms. The costume left her arms and a section of thigh bare, the leggings similar to thigh-high stockings. She had expressed some reservations when it had initially been presented to her, but apparently it had done "quite well" in the team's focus groups. She had to admit that it was extremely comfortable and performed its job well.
As she ran back to Jade, Maise made the final touch, drawing her jet black hair back into a long braid that reached the small of her back. She could see the look of shock on Jade's face when she skidded to a stop in front of her, just finishing the braiding. While it had felt like she had been gone for at least ten minutes to Maise, she knew that the actual time elapsed was closer to that many seconds. She panted slightly from the exertion, but gritted her teeth.
"Let's go," Maise said, trying to sound more confident and bold than she felt.
"Yeah, let's do this," Jade grinned in response, nodding. "The teleportation can be a little disconcerting, but I'm going to land us right in that room. I'll do my best to shield us, but I'll be relying on you to take care of those goons. Got it?"
"Got it."
Holding the open book in one hand, Jade began to gesture with her other. She spoke, softly at first, words that didn't seem to make any sense to Maise. It wasn't like listening to someone speak in an unknown language, though, she realized. There was more to it. There seemed to be something wrong with the words themselves, as if they could not possibly be understood. It was as though the words themselves were just wrong.
And then the world around them began to swirl, colors running into each other as though melting. When they began to reform, Maise could see the room from the surveillance footage beginning to appear around them. For a brief moment, she stared at her surroundings in wonder. Could magic really be real?
"No, please don't!" A woman's voice screamed, abruptly yanking Maise back to reality.
"Time's up," a man's voice answered.
The office workers were still in the center of the room, all but one of them on their knees with faces pressed against the tile floor. Five masked and armed men stood around the ring, while a sixth held the last coworker by her hair, the barrel of his gun pressed against her head.
"Shaw-" Jade began to exclaim. Before she could finish the word, Maise was in motion. Fuelled by fear for the crying woman, she exerted every ounce of power that she could muster. The room seemed to stop as she darted forward. She barrelled into the shooter at full speed, grabbing his arm and easily yanking the gun away from the woman and then driving her shoulder into him to send him flying. The impact threw her off balance and she dove forward as she fell, holding tight to the gunman as she landed and then throwing him into the wall at the other end of the office.
"-na!" Jade finished as Maise slipped back into normal time when she hit the ground hard, knocking the wind from her.
"What the fuck?" one of the other militants exclaimed as her first target hit the wall hard across the room in an explosion of shattered cubicle and office supplies.
Maise went wide-eyed at the explosive boom of a gun firing, the sound seeming to fill the room. Mind still reeling from the unexpected and jarring return to regular time, she sped up as quickly as possible, but her power came reluctantly. Scanning the room quickly, she felt a moment of relief when she saw that the shooter was aiming at her. And then the sight of the bullet approaching dismissed the majority of that relief. She didn't have enough speed yet, she realized. There was no way she could speed up fast enough to dodge the bullet.
A flash of red appeared in the air just before the bullet impacted her chest, and Maise watched in wonder as it melted away to nothingness. Darting back up to her feet, she felt her speed increasing quickly and spared a glance back at Jade to see the smile on the other girl's face. Magic was definitely real, Maise realized, and it disintegrated bullets.
On her feet, Maise began to run in earnest. She could see that the men were beginning to slowly turn to bring their guns to bear on her. Even after a long, eventful week of practicing with her superhuman ability, she was still amazed by what she could do. With her opponents practically standing still, she ran from one to the next, yanking guns out of their hands to throw them across the room and out of harm's way. As she disarmed each, she hit them hard, aiming for the ballistic armor that shielded their chests and then watched in satisfaction as they went flying across the room away from her.
As the last man was flung away, Maise released her power and skidded to a stop in the center of the room. At once, exhaustion struck. She had never used her powers to this extent before and, as such, she had never experienced the level of exhaustion that struck her now. At once, every muscle in her body seemed to lose its strength and fail her as her lungs burned with the effort of drawing in air. She fell hard to her knees and then forward onto her hands, barely able to keep herself in even that position as she panted.
"Shawnee!" Jade exclaimed, running through the crowd. "That was amazing!"
"G-get," Maise groaned, "get th-them out of here."
"Everybody out," Jade ordered. The sorceress muttered more of those magical words and then a beam of magic lit the room and simultaneously opened the exit doors.
Maise struggled to recover, lifting her head to watch with satisfaction as the terrified hostages ran from the room. They, at least, weren't trampling eachother. Jade came to Maise's side, squatting down to help lift her up onto her feet, leg muscles trembling as she leaned in heavily on the smaller girl. She could tell that Jade struggled with the effort of holding her up and began to make their way toward the exit.
"You did it, Shawnee," Jade whispered excitedly. "Now let's go let the-"
Maise heard it first, the sound of a puff of air and then the clanging of something metal against tile. She tried to call up her power, but it was like trying to draw water from an empty well. Turning, she saw the source of the sound as a spinning canister bounced across the ground toward them, expelling green gas. Jade released her, pulling out the book again. Maise tried to take a step toward the bouncing cannister, but only succeeded in falling to her knees once more.
As Jade began to speak, the cannister reached them, filling the air around them with its gas. The scent of it reached Maise, surprising her that it smelled almost sweet as it reached her nostrils. At once, her vision began to swim and what little strength she had began to leave her limbs. By the time she hit the floor in front of her, she was too groggy to feel the impact. She blinked her eyes once, and then was asleep.