Action Figures - Issue Six: Power Play Read online




  Copyright © 2017 by Michael Bailey

  All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Printed in the United States of America

  First Printing, 2017

  ISBN-13: 978-1542419895

  ISBN-10: 1542419891

  AISN: B06X1DBDN6

  Michael Bailey/Innsmouth Look Publishing www.innsmouthlook.com

  Cover illustrations Copyright © 2017 by Patricia Lupien

  Cover design by Patricia Lupien

  Book production by Amazon Create Space

  www.createspace.com

  Edited by Julie Tremblay

  Contents

  PART ONE: ONE OF OUR SUPER-HEROES IS MISSING

  ONE

  TWO

  THREE

  FOUR

  FIVE

  SIX

  SEVEN

  EIGHT

  NINE

  TEN

  ELEVEN

  TWELVE

  THIRTEEN

  FOURTEEN

  FIFTEEN

  PART TWO: OUT IN THE OPEN

  SIXTEEN

  SEVENTEEN

  EIGHTEEN

  NINETEEN

  TWENTY

  TWENTY-ONE

  TWENTY-TWO

  TWENTY-THREE

  TWENTY-FOUR

  TWENTY-FIVE

  TWENTY-SIX

  TWENTY-SEVEN

  TWENTY-EIGHT

  TWENTY-NINE

  THIRTY

  THIRTY-ONE

  THIRTY-TWO

  THIRTY-THREE

  THIRTY-FOUR

  THIRTY-FIVE

  EPILOGUE

  ACTION FIGURES – LIVE FREE OR DIE

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  PART ONE: ONE OF OUR SUPER-HEROES IS MISSING

  I tap my headset. “Lightstorm? You there?” I say. “Lightstorm, respond. Lightstorm? Carrie?”

  “Hm? Sara?” Meg mumbles, my rising panic rousing her from her nap. “What is it? What’s wrong?”

  “I don’t know. Carrie went off with one of the aliens. I had her on the comm but she dropped off all of a sudden.”

  “I’m sure she’s okay, hon. Carrie can take care of herself.”

  “No. Something’s wrong.” I stumble to my feet as a painful burning sensation fills my chest. For some reason I look up into the sky, as if I expect to see Carrie hovering above me. I cycle through every channel on my comm system, listening for her voice. There’s nothing on the secure Protectorate channel, nothing on the military or police bands...oh God. Oh God...

  “Meg, something’s wrong!” I squeal, even as some distant corner of my brain argues that everything’s fine, I’m overreacting, there’s some rational explanation for this.

  There isn’t.

  Carrie’s gone.

  ONE

  “Sara!” Meg shouts. “Wait!”

  Kingsport Heights Beach is still total chaos. The military works to clear the battlefield of debris and bodies both human and alien. Police officers try to clear space for ambulances to get in and pick up those lucky enough to have survived the fight but not so lucky they can reach the edge of the hot zone on their own power. Meg and I dash past Concorde as he confers with a group of men and women, all of them in some kind of uniform. He calls out to me. I don’t stop.

  We weave through the maze of wrecked cars and demolished military vehicles, skirt past a cluster of black sedans bearing government plates, past a dump truck transporting alien battlesuits and weaponry to the beach to be secured inside the dreadnought, and jump down onto the beach itself, where the Vanguard stands watch over its prisoners. They’re all aliens — for-real aliens from outer space. They brought this war to Kingsport, and one of them must know where Carrie is.

  “Where is she?” I charge at one of the Vanguard aliens, a thing built like a gorilla with leathery skin and a second set of T-Rex arms set into his chest. He’s big and intimidating, but he retreats as I run up to him. “Where’s Carrie? What did you do with her?!”

  “Honey, easy,” Meg says, pulling me back.

  “They took Carrie!”

  Meg spins me around. “Sara, you’re not going to do Carrie any good if you’re freaking out. You need to cool down and think.”

  Meg squeezes my arms, and I feel her strength flow into me, quite literally. It’s a smart move; she knows my empathic abilities pick up, sometimes involuntarily, on other people’s emotions, and she uses that to inject some much-needed calm into me. The adrenaline flushes out so fast my head spins. Meg’s grip tightens to keep me from falling over.

  “Psyche, what’s wrong?” I look past Meg to see Concorde approaching. He’s hurrying as best as he can, but he took as much of a beating as anyone. He needs to rest but he’s not going to let a little thing like possible internal bleeding slow him down, not when there’s work to be done.

  “Carrie’s gone. She went off with one of them,” I say, gesturing toward the Vanguard. “She hasn’t come back.”

  “I’m sure she’s —”

  “Don’t tell me she’s okay, Concorde, and don’t tell me I’m overreacting,” I snap. “Something’s wrong. Carrie’s gone. I know.” I turn back toward the gorilla alien. “Where’s my friend?”

  Gorilla grunts at me. A squishy-looking alien, who reminds me vaguely of Patrick from SpongeBob SquarePants, says something incomprehensible to Gorilla, who responds with more grunts.

  “This is a problem,” Concorde says.

  “No it’s not. They can understand us. Do you have any more of those translator things?” I say to Gorilla.

  He furrows his sloping brow at me. He’s considering it — I think. Whatever wavelength these beings’ brains operate on, it’s not compatible with my powers; I can’t read their emotions, much less their thoughts.

  With a snort, Gorilla reaches into a belt pouch and hands me a pair of small, pale yellow blobs. I press them into my ears and — “Ohh, gross,” I moan. It feels like I’m shoving wads of cold snot into my ears.

  “Not a pleasant sensation, is it?” Patrick says.

  “No, it isn’t.” Oh, hey.

  “Astounding. Why the matrices don’t fry their primitive little brains,” Gorilla says, his voice not quite matching the movements of his mouth. That’s distracting.

  “I can understand you, you know, so start talking. Where’s Carrie?”

  “Commander Do has escorted your friend to Kyros Alliance Central, on Kyros Prime.”

  “Escorted? Or taken?”

  “Your friend went of her own accord.”

  “Yeah? Then when is she coming back?”

  Gorilla hesitates. “I cannot say,” he says, and oh, I do not like his apologetic tone. “The Alliance is in the midst of a significant crisis, the likes of which we’ve not seen in generations. The Council of Generals has called in Vanguardians from every allied world —”

  “Carrie isn’t part of the Vanguard,” I say, but Gorilla shoots that argument down.

  “She possesses the astrarma,” he says, referring to the alien tech that gives Carrie her powers. “She is Vanguard.”

  “But she is coming back.” I mean it as a question. It comes out as a demand.

  “Maybe. If the council decides she’s —” Patrick begins. Gorilla makes a jabbing gesture. Patrick shuts right up. “Sorry,” he mumbles.

  “The matter is out of our hands,” Gorilla says.

  ***

  Gorilla abruptly dismisses us so his people can focus on securing their prisoners and all that tempting ali
en tech in the dreadnought — the Nightwind. The Kyros Alliance is supposed to dispatch another ship to remove the Nightwind, but Gorilla — Lieutenant Bote Maasuur — has no sense of exactly when that might happen. Optimistically, it could arrive within a few hours, he says, but Kingsport could wind up playing host to a crippled alien warship for a day or two.

  “That’s one problem on a very long list of problems,” Concorde says, calling to order an impromptu meeting of the Protectorate, the Hero Squad, and the Quantum Quintet. “Entity. So glad you could finally make it.”

  I jump when I realize the big leather-covered weirdo is looming right behind me. He wasn’t there a second ago, and I never felt his presence. How does he do that? Is he an alien too? That would explain a lot.

  “I’ve been here the whole time,” the Entity says in his creepy monotone.

  “We never saw you,” says Kilowatt Quantum, who may be the unsung hero of the battle. He can generate focused electromagnetic pulses, which generally aren’t very useful, but when your opponents are all wearing fancy powered battlesuits? Extremely useful.

  “Exactly,” the Entity says.

  “He was here,” Missy says, and that’s good enough for Concorde.

  “All right. We have two big issues to address,” he says, “and the first is Lightstorm. She’s apparently gone off with the Vanguard’s commanding officer to Kyros Prime, wherever that is. It seems she went of her own free will but we have no idea if or when she’ll return.”

  I expect an outburst, for someone to say, “There has to be a way to get her back!” or for Matt to throw out one of his so-insane-it’s-brilliant ideas, but all I hear is a heavy, resigned silence.

  “That means we’re that much more short-handed, and that brings me to problem number two,” Concorde continues. “The Kingsport PD has been decimated. I spoke to the chief and his rough estimate is that two-thirds of the force is dead or injured. The governor plans to declare martial law in Kingsport in the short term, at least until the dreadnought’s been removed. Distasteful, I know, but it’s necessary.”

  “And in the long term?” Mindforce says.

  “That’s where we come in. The chief plans to call in some favors and see if he can borrow some officers from surrounding communities, but it won’t be enough. Until the department can rebuild, we’re going to be pulling extra duty.”

  That’s a noble thought, but we’re in no condition to sub in for a school crossing guard much less the police. Most of us are so exhausted we can’t see straight, and a few of us took some nasty hits from the aliens’ hypervelocity weapons. Nina Nitro is toughing out a gunshot to the abdomen until all the injured civilians have been cared for; Rockjaw Quantum literally had chunks of his rocklike skin shot out; and Stuart is covered in bruises.

  I tell myself it could have been worse. I glance over at the olive drab pavilion tent the military set up at the edge of what used to be a public baseball field. That’s where they’re storing all the bodies until they can be removed. It’s a harsh reminder that any one of us could have wound up in there.

  “I have too much free time on my hands anyway,” Nina says, trying and failing to hide how much pain she’s in.

  “You are going to heal first,” Concorde says. “We all are. As soon as we clear out, anyone with an injury is going to the hospital. Everyone else, go home and get some sleep. The National Guard will keep watch on the dreadnought until the Vanguard sends the recovery ship.”

  “Which will be when?” Matt asks.

  “Unknown, but from what I gather, the Vanguard isn’t thrilled about leaving advanced tech accessible to what it considers a primitive culture, so I suspect they’ll do their best to clear it out ASAP. I informed Lieutenant — Maasuur, was it?” Concorde says, looking to me for confirmation. “I informed Lieutenant Maasuur we’d guard the ship in the meantime, but he plans to leave a couple of his men — er, people — um...”

  “Let’s go with people,” Doc Quantum suggests.

  “He plans to leave two of his people behind to keep an eye on the prisoners and, I suspect, to keep us honest until they get back.”

  “You mean they’re leaving?” Matt says.

  “The Kyros Alliance has its own version of the Prime Directive,” I say. “They’ve already violated it, like, a thousand times over, but Lieutenant Maasuur doesn’t want to stick around and make it any worse.”

  “Will he be returning to Alliance Central or whatever they called it?”

  “I see where you’re going. Good thinking,” Concorde says. “Anyone want to sacrifice their phone?”

  ***

  When Matt told me what he had in mind, I offer up my phone without a second thought.

  I find a relatively quiet corner of the battlefield to record my message then give the phone to Lt. Maasuur. He promises he’ll deliver it to Carrie, but that’s all he can promise. It’s good enough. It has to be.

  Lt. Maasuur orders First Rank At Mo Ke — a particularly bizarre alien with a cylindrical body, three stumpy legs, and a matching set of arms — and Lt. Commander Fast, who looks like a giant snake, to stay behind and keep an eye on things Earth-side. They decide to station themselves inside the Nightwind so they won’t distract the humans. Or maybe so we won’t distract them? I imagine we look as weird to them as they do to us.

  I stand there on the beach and watch Lt. Maasuur and his people take off, rising into the sky until they’re tiny pinpoints of light, until those pinpoints wink out of sight. Meg tries to pull me away, but I don’t want to leave. I want to be here when Lt. Maasuur comes back. He could come back at any minute.

  I feel so helpless and useless.

  “Hey.” Meg wraps her arms around my waist and holds me close. “You’ve done all you can. Nothing left to do now but wait.”

  “No. There’s one more thing I have to do,” I say. I’d give anything I had to avoid it, but there’s no way out of this. “I have to tell Christina her daughter’s been abducted by aliens.”

  TWO

  “Whoa, hey, whoa,” Matt says, holding up his hands. “You can’t tell her what happened.”

  “I can’t not tell her,” I say. “Seriously, what am I supposed to say? There’s no lie in the world that can cover this up.”

  “You can’t tell Christina the truth. You need to think of something.”

  “Like what, dude?” Stuart says. “Carrie ran away to join the circus?”

  “If Sara outs Carrie as a super-hero, she outs all of us,” Matt says, and that stops the debate cold. He’s right; once Christina learns Carrie is Lightstorm, it’ll take her, like, two seconds to figure out who the rest of the Hero Squad are.

  “Aw, crap.”

  “Yeah, crap. Look,” Matt says to me, “I trust Christina not to blab our secret to the entire world but there’s no way she’s going to keep something like that from my parents.”

  “Then tell them before she can,” I say.

  Matt laughs humorlessly. “Yeah, no, that’s not happening.”

  “Well, what the hell am I supposed to do?!” I shriek. “I don’t know what to do!”

  Once again, Meg comes to my emotional rescue. She pulls me away from Matt and the others — mostly away from Matt — and holds me until I’m done shaking. “It’s okay, honey,” she whispers. “It’s okay.”

  “I don’t know what to do, Meg,” I whimper.

  She takes my face in her hands and presses her forehead to mine. Her skin is cool and soothing. “You’re going to do the right thing,” she says. “It’s going to be hard and it’s going to be scary and it’s going to be messy, but you’re going to do it, because it’s the right thing to do.”

  “I don’t know what the right thing is.”

  “Yes you do.” Meg smiles. She always has a smile for me. “Yes you do.”

  Yeah. I do.

  I rejoin my friends. I have to force myself to look each of them in the eyes when I say, “I’m telling Christina the truth.”

  “Dammit, Sara,” Matt says.r />
  “Then give me a better idea. Come on.” I step back and spread my arms as if waiting to snatch up whatever fantastic, amazing, this-solves-all-our-problems solution he pitches at me and give it a grateful hug — but he’s got nothing, and he knows it. “I have to do this, Matt. I’m sorry.”

  I wait for someone, anyone to say something. I get stony silence. I take Meg’s hand and turn to leave.

  “Hey,” Matt says. I stop. “You really think I’m going to let you walk home after a day like this?”

  ***

  Before we go, I touch base with Concorde and Mindforce and let them know what I’m about to do. I’m braced for a ton of pushback from them — from Concorde, at the very least — but they’re surprisingly okay with it. Supportive, even.

  “I think this is overdue,” Concorde says, and then he really blows my mind and offers me a place to stay if things with Christina get too ugly and I need to give her some space.

  Meg walks with us back to Matt’s car — which, like many of the homes surrounding Kingsport Heights Beach, did not escape unscathed. Tiny holes, the mark of hypervelocity rounds, riddle the side from front bumper to back, and something extremely hot scorched the paint job. Matt touches a finger to the rear driver’s side panel. Charred, bubbled paint sloughs off to expose the metal underneath.

  “Aw, man,” he says with no more disappointment or outrage than if he’d found a hole in his sock.

  “Dude, why are you not having a ten-megaton meltdown right now?” Stuart says.

  Matt shrugs. “Too tired.”

  He’s not the only one. Missy crawls into the back seat, takes off her mask, curls up in the corner, and passes right out. Stuart slides in next to her.

  “If you need to talk after, call me,” Meg says.

  “I will,” I say.

  She squeezes my hand. “You can do this, Strawberry. I have faith in you.”

  I steal one last kiss for courage before climbing into the car.

  “Strawberry?” Matt asks.

  My cheeks burn. “I was wearing strawberry ChapStick the first time we kissed,” I say.