The First Superhero (Book 2): The Siege of the Supers

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The First Superhero (Book 2): The Siege of the Supers Page 13

by Logan Rutherford


  Then it started to click. He’d told me he had powers. He’d told me he’d been gone for a few months too. He’d been dropping hints, and I never caught on. I suddenly got the feeling that—like me—he hadn’t been volunteering to help rebuild during those lost months.

  “You have five minutes to make preparations,” a voice said over the loudspeaker.

  Fights between the Supers broke out immediately. Rai used his shape shifting powers to turn his arm into a sharp object and thrust it through Sven. I guess he didn’t know that Sven had regenerative powers, because the look of surprise on his face when he pulled his arm out and Sven was still standing was genuine.

  A blast of heat hit my back and I jumped out of the way. I turned and saw Brian had begun to attack me, shooting flames from his hand. I saw a building nearby and jumped six stories on top of it. I looked around the dome, looking for any way to escape. Inside the dome was a fake city, complete with cars, street vendors, and city blocks. Behind me a small portion of the area was set up to be like a forest, while another looked to be an open desert. In all, the dome was the size of two football fields in both length and width.

  I looked down at the brawl taking place below, where Hank was fighting with the girl who had attacked me in the showers a few nights ago, Beatrice. With a name like that, I could understand why she seemed so angry all the time. She had laser vision, but was having a hard time hitting Hank. He kept dodging out of the way just in time and getting a couple more hits on her.

  But then I saw a huge guy named Barry charging at him, and Hank had no idea. Barry had super strength, and if he blindsided Hank, it wouldn’t end well.

  I jumped off the building head first, my hands to my sides. I flew toward the ground like a bullet, but swooped up just in time. I flew over the heads of the fighting Supers, sending those who weren’t on steady footing stumbling backward. I flew past Barry and grabbed Hank, pulling him up in the air.

  Beatrice jumped out of the way just in time to not get run over by Barry.

  I flew to the building I’d been standing on earlier and set Hank down. “You good?” I asked.

  “Y-yeah…I’m good,” Hank said, out of breath.

  “Kane, what’s going on? Are you out?” Samantha asked frantically.

  “No, some sort of exercise. Samantha, did you know anything about Drew working for the STF?” I asked.

  “Who are you talking to?” Hank asked, but I ignored him.

  “Oh my god, I had no idea! You mean he’s known where they’ve been keeping you this entire time?”

  “I think so. I’m about to find out exactly where that’s at once I find him. Make sure Holocene’s ready. I’m getting out of here today.”

  “Good, because I need to tell you something. The Legion of Richter is mobilizing. Atlas and his strongest soldiers are going somewhere to do something, but we don’t know what yet. It can’t be good, though.”

  It looked like I wouldn’t be getting any R&R once I got out. “Okay, I’ll be out of here soon. Don’t worry, everything’s going to be okay,” I said. I believed it, too. Just knowing that I’d be out soon made me feel invincible. Even though I pretty much was out already, I felt confident. The cards were turning out to be in my favor.

  “Five minutes is up,” a voice said over the loudspeakers.

  I turned to Hank. “You stay here, I’ll be back. We’re getting out of here today, Hank.”

  Hank looked at me with wide eyes and nodded, like I was crazy.

  “Don’t worry,” I said with a smirk. “The voice in my head is a real person, and she’s going to help get us out of here.”

  I turned away, toward the entrance. The doors that led to the holding bay opened and out walked STF Soldiers.

  Then I realized why they didn’t have guns: because all of them were Supers. Every single one of them had purple Eximus electricity jumping and crackling from their arms. I scanned the faces as they marched to the playing field, searching for Drew.

  I found him. Third row, far right.

  It was time to get some answers.

  I flew down and grabbed Drew by the back of his armor, being careful not to touch his skin. I realized that the Eximus energy wasn’t coming from him, though; his powers were off. I flew toward the forest and landed near the back wall of the dome.

  Drew looked around frantically. It happened so fast, he hadn’t even realized what was going on.

  “You have some explaining to do,” I said, not dialing back the anger in my voice.

  “That’s rich, coming from you,” Drew said, taking a step toward me. “I’ll explain everything later, but right now we need to get out of here.”

  “And why should I trust you?” I said.

  In a quick swooping motion, Drew activated his powers, slid behind me, and smashed his finger into the back of my neck. I felt an intense heat and a surge of pain. I jumped forward, ready to fight Drew even though that was the last thing I wanted.

  “I just overloaded your Eximus generator. It’s been destroyed, so they can’t remotely take away your powers,” Drew explained. “Take your headgear off.”

  I pulled the device off my head, threw it to the ground and smashed it with my foot.

  “Do you trust me now?” Drew asked.

  “A bit more than I did five minutes ago. Tell me where we are,” I said.

  “I don’t know the exact location. They brought us here in a blacked-out bus. I do know that it’s somewhere in the Oregon woods, near the coast. Should be easy to spot from the sky.”

  “You get that, Samantha?” I asked.

  “Yep, telling Holocene now,” she responded.

  “Who was that?” Drew asked.

  “Backup. What’s next?” I asked.

  “I’m going to overload this section of the force field like I did your generator. I’ll only be able to take out this small section, though. Go grab your friends and bring them back here. Once we’re out of here, I’ll explain everything,” Drew said, then walked towards the force field wall.

  I hesitated for a second, taking a long look at Drew. He seemed genuine, and he had destroyed the tracker in my neck. Even if this was all just a ruse and he was trying to trick me, I had my powers back and they weren’t going anywhere. I’d have to stay on my toes, but I felt as if I could take care of any situation that might arise.

  I flew toward where the battle was taking place. When I reached the building where I had left Hank I saw that Sven had teleported himself up there. Sven knocked Hank to the ground just as I got close. I sped up and turned in the air, slammed into Sven feet first, and sent him flying off the building.

  “Thanks for that,” Hank said as I helped him up.

  “Looked like you could use some help. Come on, we’re getting out of here,” I told him. Then I grabbed him and flew him back to Drew.

  Drew had both of his hands on the force field, the Eximus flowing through him. He grunted and groaned, concentrating as hard as he could on overloading the force field.

  I turned and flew back toward the fight, searching for Rai. He was fighting one of the STF Soldiers, dodging the punches from their Eximus-infused skin.

  I swooped down and grabbed him, then flew back to Drew and Hank.

  Once I’d set Rai down, Drew let out a shout. I could taste the electricity in the air as a twenty-foot section of the wall sparked. The purple Eximus energy stopped flowing on that section. There were burn marks all over and it looked as if it was in bad shape.

  I walked up to it and touched it, jerking my hand away quickly just in case. Nothing. I touched it again, holding my hand on it for a bit longer. It had worked. Drew had shut it down.

  I turned and looked back at Drew, Rai, and Hank, smiling, then punched the wall as hard as I could. That section of the wall exploded outward, and I took a step outside.

  We were free.

  37

  ESCAPE

  DREW DESTROYED the generators on Hank and Rai. “We need to get out of here fast. The guards will
be on their way any time now,” he said once he was done.

  “Okay, give it a few seconds. Holocene should be here any moment,” I said.

  I looked up to the sky and saw a blur fly by, another right behind it. The blur came back and hovered over the complex. It was Holocene. Next to her was a dark-skinned guy who was carrying a blonde girl on his shoulders. “Down here!” I shouted, waving my arms.

  Holocene and the guy flew down, landing in front of us. Holocene walked toward me and wrapped her arms around me. I hugged her back. It was an incredible feeling, knowing I was actually going to escape. With Holocene and her new friends here, I felt as if we could take on anything.

  “I’m so glad you’re safe,” Holocene said, pulling away. “I’m so sorry it took us so long.”

  “Don’t worry about it. We’re going to have to save introductions for later,” I said, nodding toward the people she’d brought with her.

  “Right. Let’s get you all out of here,” she said, looking at the guys standing behind me.

  Something else caught my eye. All the purple Eximus energy that had been flowing through the dome had stopped. It had turned into a regular metal dome.

  A blur fell from the sky and crashed into the roof of the dome. I could hear it slam into the ground inside.

  “What the hell was that?” Drew said.

  “Oh, no,” Holocene said. She turned and looked up at the sky and the rest of us followed her gaze.

  A group of ten Supers flew in, each of them carrying another on their back, except for the one flying at the front. Some of them flew through the hole their friend had made, while three of them landed around Holocene and the rest of us.

  They were all wearing long black jackets and had what looked like body armor on underneath their shirts, but I couldn’t tell for sure.

  The one in the middle stepped forward, tall and confident. His black hair was slicked back, perfectly shaped. He looked at me with evil, menacing eyes. They were colored purple, a shade I’d never seen in person before. He walked with power, like he knew he could take each and every one of us down in a second. “How nice to meet you, Tempest,” he said in a calm voice, looking right at me. His tone was patronizing, his smile not genuine.

  “What makes you think I’m Tempest?” I said. He had no way of knowing. I wasn’t wearing my costume and this was the first time we’d seen each other—in costume or not.

  “I know a lot of things. If you’ll just give my men and me a moment, we’ll be taking care of this STF scum. Don’t go anywhere, though. We have a lot to discuss,” he said with a smile. He hovered in the air for a moment, as did his henchmen, then they flew into the dome.

  I watched them disappear in disbelief. I wasn’t going to stick around to ask questions. “Let’s get out of here fast, guys,” I said.

  I grabbed Drew and put Rai on my back, while Holocene took Hank. The girl she’d brought climbed onto her other friend’s back.

  One of the buildings in the complex exploded to my right. I jumped into the air and we all flew out of there as fast as we could.

  It was time to figure out exactly what was going on.

  38

  THE NAME OF THE ENEMY

  DIRECTOR LOREN LOOKED at the wreckage of her STF Complex from her helicopter. It had been a little over eight hours since the Legion of Richter had attacked, and she was just as angry as she’d been when she found out. She had been in Washington D.C., trying to secure more funding for her project. As soon as she found out about the attack, she’d flown back to Oregon as fast as she could.

  Looking upon the wreckage of what she’d worked so hard to build, she felt her anger grow.

  “Land over there,” she said to the pilot, pointing to a clear spot outside her Eximus Dome.

  The helicopter landed and she stepped out, three guards following her. She looked at the sight. All the Supers had escaped and their generators and trackers had been destroyed. She was back at square one. Her complex had been destroyed, her people killed; everything was gone. Even Agent York was dead, the poor bastard. Nobody stood a chance, not even the Eximus soldiers she was so proud of. They were all gone.

  She walked through one of the holes in the front of the dome. The fake city on the inside was rubble. Nothing was left standing. She kept walking toward the wreckage, stepping past the bodies of her soldiers as she did so.

  She stepped onto the city street and took everything in. She still couldn’t believe that all her hard work was gone. Not only that, but she’d never figured out Tempest’s name. Secretly, that frustrated her more than anything. There was so much to learn from him. So much that could’ve stopped this from happening. But he had to be stubborn. He’d refused to tell her his name, and now she had no idea where he was. She had no way to make him pay.

  “Who’s there?” a female voice said from behind some rubble.

  Loren almost jumped out of her skin. She rushed over to where the voice had come from, her guards following close behind. Behind a wrecked car covered in concrete and a street pole sat one of her Eximus soldiers, a young girl with black hair. She was dirty and her clothes had rips and tears in them. She was scraped up and in bad shape, but alive. Her hand were resting on the chest of someone, a small amount of Eximus energy coming from it.

  Loren fell to her knees next to the girl and began checking to be sure she was all right. She felt a motherly duty set in. The Eximus soldiers were her pride and joy, and she’d thought they were all gone. She would do whatever it took to keep this one alive. “Are you okay?”

  “I think so. I’ve been hiding here for a while with this Super,” the girl said, gesturing with her head to her captive.

  Loren recognized him. He was the one who controlled fire. “Wake him up,” she said.

  The soldier nodded and gave the Super a jolt of electricity. He sat up, gasping for air. The Eximus soldier kept a hand on him, making sure he didn’t get his powers back.

  “Hello, there,” Loren said. “What’s your name again?”

  “B-B-Brian T-Turner,” he said through gritted teeth. She could tell he was in a lot of pain. “Please let me g-go.”

  Loren’s face grew dark and she furrowed her brows. “I’m the one asking the questions here, Brian.”

  “I know something. I know something y-you want to know. If I tell you, will you let me go?”

  Loren’s interest was piqued. She figured what the hell. It wasn’t like she had to keep her word. “Sure, Brian. What do you know?”

  “I know who Tempest is. He went to school with me. I can tell you his name.”

  Loren’s eyes flared and her breath caught. She couldn’t believe it. If Brian was telling the truth, she was about to find out who Tempest was. She wouldn’t be at square one anymore. She had an ace up her sleeve and she hadn’t even known it until now. “Tell me.”

  “Kane Andrews. Tempest is a guy named Kane Andrews,” Brian said.

  Loren smiled. It was the first time in a long time that she’d actually, genuinely smiled. She was back on top. She had what she needed. She’d just been given the key to figuring the Supers out. Now, she wouldn’t stop until she knew everything about Kane Andrews, all the way down to what he’d had for breakfast every day of his life. If there was a secret to destroying the Supers for good, that secret lay with Kane Andrews. And she was going to find it.

  “Thank for that information, Brian,” Loren said. She stood and retrieved her gun from its holster. “You’re released.”

  “No wa—” Brian called out, but he was cut off by a gunshot.

  Loren had put a bullet between his eyes.

  She put her gun away and reached down to help the Eximus soldier up. Her very last one. “Why are you smiling?” Loren asked when she saw the look on the girl’s face.

  “I just think it’s funny that Tempest’s name is Kane Andrews.”

  “Why’s that?” Loren asked.

  “Because my name is Cassidy Andrews. Crazy coincidence, huh?”

  Loren looked
the girl up and down. “Yes, a crazy coincidence.”

  PART III:

  The Siege of the Supers

  39

  WAKING UP

  LEOPOLD RENNER BLINKED his eyes open, the whole room around him appearing blurry. He lifted his hands up to rub them into focus. When he did so, he felt wires and tubes that were attached to him rise up as well.

  Once he could see better, he looked down and saw that he was hooked up to all sorts of machines that monitored his vitals and gave him an IV, as well as other medical things.

  “It’s good to see you, Leo,” someone said to his right.

  Leo turned his head and saw Kane Andrews standing there, smiling at him.

  “W-where…” Leo tried to speak, but his mouth was too dry.

  “Here, drink this,” someone to his left said. He turned and saw the brunette girl who had been in the car with him earlier standing there. She pressed a cup into his hand.

  Leopold grabbed the cup and drank the water from it. He felt the nasty, dry taste peel from his mouth. Now that he felt refreshed, her name popped into his head. “You’re Selena. Holocene.”

  Selena nodded. “That’s right.”

  “It’s good to see you remembered,” Kane said.

  Leo turned his head to his right. “What’s going on? Where am I?”

  “First, I need to show you something.” Kane was holding something behind his back. He revealed a mirror, facing away from Leo. “Take a good look into this mirror.”

  Kane flipped the mirror around and Leo saw himself staring back. But it wasn’t quite himself. It wasn’t the Leopold Renner who was in his mid-thirties; he looked the same as he had when he was twenty years old. But that couldn’t be right. Not at all.

  A beeping noise intensified as Leo’s heart rate increased. “How is this possible?” An explanation landed in his head. “Is this some sort of time travel?”

  Kane and Selena laughed. Kane shook his head. “No, of course not. I will explain everything.”

 

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