Saturday, 20 November 2010 22:50

Razzle Dazzle (Part 3)

Written by
Rate this item
(0 votes)

RAZZLE DAZZLE

Part 3

By Bek D. Corbin

“IT’S OLD MISTER JENKINS!”

“Yeah, it’s me, Old Man Jenkins, the caretaker” wheezed the geezer. “And I WANT THESE CRAZY KIDS ARRESTED! They broke in and attacked me!”

“Nice try,” Thelma said. “But Old Man Jenkins wouldn’t know how to arrange all those stage magic tricks to make the place look like it was haunted, or to set up those hidden TV cameras all over the place, so that you could keep track of what was going on, to put on your little horror show whenever anyone came to look at the place. Let’s see who you really are!” She tugged at his face, and his false face ripped off his real one like an old scab.

“Okay, who IS he?” Orvy asked, baffled.

“Why I recognize him!” the State Policeman exclaimed. “That’s Mephisto the Magician! He used to be a big noise in vaudeville, before he became a crook.”

“BAH!” Mephisto snorted, “I would have gotten away, if not for that stupid DOG of yours!”

linebreak shadow

Townsend buried his face in his hand and made a whimpering sound. “Not only did I pull a ‘Haunted House’ scam, but I couldn’t pull the wool over the eyes of a bunch of meddling kids and their DOG! I was wearing a glow-in-the-dark SHEET!” Townsend buried his face in his hand again and shuddered in remembered shame. “Well, that was it… I just dived into the nearest bottle of scotch and didn’t bother to come out. The cops could have picked me up at any time, but they just didn’t bother. ‘Oh, Mephisto? Yeah, he’s still around, but he’s no danger to anyone… except a bottle of booze…’ I wasn’t even a JOKE anymore, I was a fucking embarrassment.”

“Then what happened?”

Townsend smiled warmly. “Then Lazlo got out of jail. He’d spent ten years out of twenty-year sentence in Joliet, and got out on parole. The first thing he did was break that parole and come looking for me. It took him a while, but he eventually found me in Canton, Georgia, mooching around, trying to scare up change for a bottle of rotgut. I have no idea how I got there, it was all a blur. I told you that Lazlo was loyal? I had no idea how loyal. Not only did he find me, not only did he drag me out of the fucking gutter and sober me up, but he dug into his personal savings, and got me into a sanitarium. MAN, did I have the detox from HELL!”

“It was that bad for you?”

“For ME? No… For everyone else at the sanitarium? YES! Dusty, y’know how you’re not supposed to startle a martial arts master, because their combat reflexes are so fined tuned? Well, even after they first trained me, every so often, after I’d proven that I was an asset to them, the Masters would call me back to the Monastery, and teach me how to do useful things, like know a person’s deepest darkest shameful secret, or their worst most paralyzing fear, or their kinkiest most disgusting fetish. Or how to confuse a person’s mind, or make them see, hear, smell, and feel, hell - THINK almost anything that came into your head. I’d been doing that sort of thing for thirty YEARS! Now, take all of that, and put the guy who can do all that through a nightmare cocktail of mental trauma and alcohol withdrawal…”

Townsend chuckled. “The show I put on made one Southern Aristocrat type swear off the juice forever, and put two doctors in the nuthouse!” he sighed. “But, in the end, I dried out, and there we were - me, and Lazlo, and not much else. My rep was trashed, I was ten years behind the times, Lazlo was in violation of his parole, the sanitarium had eaten up most of his cash, and the brownies must have snuck in during the night and taken all my money, ‘cause most of my bank accounts were dry as a bone.

“I managed to find some of the smaller accounts that I’d squirreled away - it’s an old Vaudeville trick: open accounts in towns where you pass through, but don’t spend a lot of time; you won’t fritter away what you haven’t got on you. I scraped together about two hundred grand and change. Mind you, this was in 1962 money, back when a ‘millionaire’ was still someone who was mind-bogglingly rich. I paid Lazlo back every penny. He said that he didn’t want it, but I insisted. Even then, I had enough that I could have retired on that. I seriously thought about it. I mean, I was seriously burned out. Neither Lazlo nor I were getting any younger. I was way out of touch. We could’a found some place out in the boonies and called it a day, and nobody would have even noticed, except Lazlo’s parole officer. We could’a just kicked back and let the whole world go to hell, it just wasn’t our problem anymore. Let the Masters and Champion and the Dark Avenger, and all the superheroes and supervillains and little nobodies that no one really gives a shit about thrash it out among themselves, we were gonna go fishing!”

“But I wasn’t quite ready to hang up my guns, not quite. I knew that I was facing one of those ‘get back on the horse, or you’ll never ride again’ moments. I was tired, and my confidence was shot, but I had to be sure. I decided to give it one last try, one last scam, just to see if I was really washed up or not. Lazlo was fine with it, either way. He saw it as my decision to make.

“Well, it was 1963, and everything was either about the cold war, the atomic bomb, civil rights, the space program, or computers, if not some combination of that. I wasn’t ready to face the cold war yet, the bomb was way too touchy, there was too much security around the space program, and there wasn’t any money in civil rights. So, I decided to tackle computers.

“Now, back in ’63, computers were these huge boxes with flashing lights and spinning tape reels and punch cards, and they took up entire buildings. And all of that was to do stuff that you can do with a laptop, if not a cell phone, these days. Four kinds of people had computers back then: the military, the government, colleges and banks. Everyone thought that you had to have a Ph.D. just to talk to a computer, and security was just about nonexistent. So, Lazlo and I went to Boston, and I read everything that MIT’s library had about computers and programming. It took me about a week, and by the time that I was finished, my problem wasn’t how to make a boatload of money with this, or not getting caught, it was in somehow making it… worthy

“A month later, I was twenty million dollars richer, I’d ruined two Hollywood studios, three accountants were under indictment, three playboy millionaires who I happen to know were superheroes in their spare time were paupered, and I was the sole owner of a fleet of freighters in the Gulf of Mexico.” Townsend chuckled. “Not only didn’t they know that it was me, but they weren’t even sure that it had happened in the first place until 1978!” Townsend cackled evilly. “I was BACK! And it felt GOOD!” He gave a sharp breath and grinned victoriously. “Man, I’d been on a winning streak too long. I’d been taking being on top for granted…”

Townsend kicked back, a smirk on his face. “Yeah, I was back. But everyone still thought of me as a washed-up rummy. That bugged me for a while, and I tried to figure out how to get them to take me seriously again, until it occurred to me. Why blow a sweet setup? If everyone thinks you’re washed up, then no one pays any attention to you. It’s as good as being invisible… I pulled two scams in my ‘Mephisto’ getup, turban and mask and everything, and <heh> everyone thought that someone else was manipulating me… <heee!> Then… Then, I received a message from the Red Brotherhood. They congratulated me on successfully conquering my greatest challenge. Then they ordered me to set up some context for rattling the cage of Amos Messing’s little superhero team, ‘The Amazing Three’.”

Redford leaned forward. “What did you do?”

“Oh, come on, Dusty! You KNOW what I did!”

linebreak shadow

BEHOLD, THE MASTER OF THE MIND!

The vehicle doors to the Kirby Building opened wide, but instead of the Amazing Three’s world-famous ‘Turbo-Trike’, the muscular featureless black-winged horned figure of CHERNOBOG, THE MASTER OF DARK SHADOWS swooped in. The automated defenses opened fire, but somehow the technological onslaught never touched the Terrifying Tenebrous Titan! But, just as Chernobog was at the sliding doors that led from the vehicle bay to the corridors that ran through the Kirby Building like a rats’ maze, a laser blast struck the door from behind him, and a dulcet clarion voice declared, “HOLD IT RIGHT THERE, BUSTER!”

Chernobog whipped around to face GALAXY GIRL, the Sizzling Sweetheart of Superhero-dom as she hovered in midair. MAN-MOUNTAIN, the Gregarious Giant of Greenwich Village, landed at his full height and allowed DR. AMAZING down onto the floor, completing the Terrific Threesome. “What?” Chernobog grated out, “HOW did you manage to escape my Tormenting Torrent of Terror-Spirits?”

“Don’t you mean, your elaborate multi-media spook-show… MEPHISTO?” Dr. Amazing answered snidely.

The darkling figure blurred with a flourish, only to be replaced by the sight of a slender man in evening dress, with a red-lined opera cape, a white jeweled turban, and a domino mask: MEPHISTO, THE MADCAP MAESTRO OF MAGIC AND MESMERISM! “Okay, so you found the speakers and projectors, big deal, so you’re Sherlock Holmes. So, Double-dome, how did you clue into thefact that it was little ol’ ME?” Mephisto sneered. “Was it my debonair presentation? My flawless execution? Or was it my fiendish cunning inarranging you to be trapped in a situation that your hidebound lack of imagination wouldn’t allow you to accept?”

“No,” Dr. Amazing said tersely. “Only YOU would think that stealing images from Walt Disney’s ‘Fantasia’ was a clever idea.”

“Ooohh… that hurt,” Mephisto sneered back. “Were you polishing that one, all the way back from Allentown?”

“Oh, give me a freaking BREAK!” Galaxy Girl let off a blast of energy that Mephisto evaded with the slightest of moves.

“I’m sorry, but no stuffed bunny for you, little missy!” Mephisto jeered. Man-Mountain lashed out with his fists, but he still couldn’t connect.

As his team-mates attacked the Peerless Pirate of Prestidigitation, Dr. Amazing slowly walked towards him, peering intently at the scene and studying Mephisto’s movements. “Melanie, Brock, you can stop now,” he said with clinical detachment.

“WHAT?” Galaxy Girl and Man-Mountain said as one.

“He’s not here. The reason you can’t touch him, is that that’s just yet another of his 3-D picture images. The reason that we just happened to catch sight of ‘Chernobog’ coming in the roof access, was that he timed it that way to lure us into dealing with this, while he was somewhere else.”

“WHERE?”

[HERE!] Mephisto jeered at them from the video plate that was installed near the door to the vehicle bay.

“How did you get past our Security System?” Brock demanded.

[Ooh… very mysterious…] Mephisto sneered. [I walked in the front entrance, while your computer was busy trying to take out my ‘Chernobog’ image. AND, while YOU three were showing how much smarter you were than your computer…] the door slid open, revealing Mephisto, standing there, smirking. “I was in your crackerbo- er, ‘Top Security Vault’, getting THIS!” He held up a large irregular iridescent crystal the size and rough shape of a football.

“NO!” gasped Galaxy Girl, “Not the COSMIC CRYSTAL!

“YES! The COSMIC CRYSTAL!” Mephisto exulted. “With this uncanny gem, I have unlimited power!” Suddenly, waves of pulsating power emitted from the crystal filling the vehicle bay. Dr. Amazing found himself trapped in a puzzle-cage that constantly shifted its cryptic configuration, as Galaxy Girl was encased in a mirrored sphere that reflected her energy blasts back at her, and Man-Mountain found himself shrunk to the size of a field mouse. Mephisto laughed triumphantly, his braying jeer filling the bay.

“Well, what are you going to do NOW, you Madman?” Dr. Amazing asked, almost breaking the stem of his pipe off in his frustration.

Mephisto paused and considered. “Gee, that IS a puzzler. Since this little sparkler can do almost ANYTHING… well, I could make all your absoluteworst nightmares a reality!” Within her mirrored sphere, Melanie turned into a hideous wrinkled aged hag. Still the size of a mouse, Brock turned into the mush-mouthed stereotype of a simpleminded black man. And inside the puzzle cage, Dr. Amazing felt his mind go blank, his eyes glaze over, and his jaw go slack. His mind, which before had been on the verge of figuring out the progressions of the puzzle cage, now was a confused tangled mess, and he couldn’t remember anything more important than Marilyn Monroe’s bra size.

“BUT, I’m not gonna,” Mephisto said, allowing them all to return to normal. “No, I’m just going to borrow one of your clever little vehicles and be on my merry way. Now, just to increase the ass-pucker factor for you, I WILL tell you what I’m gonna do - the problem with having something like the Cosmic Crystal, is that there’s always someone who wants to take it away from you. SO, the smart thing to do is make the Cosmic Crystal a part of ME. That’s right Amos! The next time we meet, I’m gonna be a GOD!” Mephisto laughed, got into the Pogo Pod and exited the bay, leaving the Amazing Three to ponder their fates.

“Oh, like I’m just gonna sit around and let THAT happen!” Brock shouted. He ran over to a screwdriver that had gotten knocked to the floor during the fight and picked it up. Hefting it, he ran at Amos’ puzzle cage, wielding it like a lance. The screwdriver drove into the complex of sliding parts, jamming one segment of it, which also affected the movements of the rest of the cage.

“Good work, old friend!” Amos said as he whipped a tool set out from his belt on his Danger Suit. “I can take it from here!”

“I aint’ that old!” Brock grumped. “And if you call me ‘little buddy’, I’m gonna hurt you!”

Dr. Amazing made short work of the cage, and quickly brought one of his amazing devices to bear on the sphere containing Galaxy Girl. “Let’s use the Hardcharger!” Brock insisted. “It’s faster! Heck, probably the only reason that Towel-Head took the Pogo Pod, was that it was so idiot-proof that even HE could fly it!”

“No, we take the Rapidstriker,” Dr. Amazing said. “It’s not as fast, but it’s more heavily armed and armored, and if I’m guessing right, where Mephisto is headed, he has a lot of firepower backing him up. Besides, you’re the only one who can fly the Hardcharger, Brock.”

“Yeah? And?” Then it struck Simpson. “Oh. Right. Six inches tall. I’m WAY too used to being out of scale with other people…”


Two hours later, Brock was back to normal. “Hey! Super-Genius! If the Cosmic Crystal is so freakin’ powerful, how come I’m back to my usual intimidatin’ Six-Ten?”

“I’m not sure, old friend,” Amos said as he concentrated on flying the Rapidstriker airship. “I still don’t have the slightest clue as to HOW the Cosmic Crystal changes reality, let alone why the effects lapse after a couple of hours.”

“But they DON’T lapse!” Galaxy Girl argued. “Do you remember the wreckage that happened when Abbadon the mutant terrorist got his hands on it?”

“Secondary causes, Melanie” Amos replied. “If you cause an earthquake, and the fault line disappears two hours later, the damage that it created is still there.”

“Maybe, but I find it very suspicious that Mephisto left in one of our vehicles, which we can follow with the tracking beacon in every one of them, instead of just leaving the way that he came.”

“It’s not suspicious,” Messing said grimly. “It’s a sign that Mephisto is losing his grip. Which makes his having the Cosmic Crystal that much more dangerous.”

“Losing his grip?” Brock asked, turning on the Rapidstriker’s sensor array, “I’d say that Mister Mojo was on his mark back just now, when he ran rings around us.”

“Yes,” Amos said stoically. “Back in his heyday, Mephisto really could pull off stunts like that. But he’s been a burned-out wreck for years, a drunken has-been. The last few times that I faced Mephisto, he wasn’t thinking straight, he wasn’t really planning; he was just pulling out ploys that had worked once, and he was hoping they’d work again. This means that someone else arranged for that scene back there, and is manipulating Mephisto, as he’s manipulated so many people over the years. I don’t know which would be worse; an unknown mastermind wielding the power of the crystal - or a distracted drunk like Mephisto having that kind of power!”

“Okay, we got something really weird goin’ down,” Brock said, peering intently at the panel. “According to these readings, the Pogo Pod is inside that cliff!”

“I installed those sensors myself,” Dr. Amazing said, gripping the stem of his pipe with his teeth. “I know they’re right!” With that, he steered the Rapidstriker right at the cliff face!

There was a moment of darkness and confusion, and then the Amazing Three found themselves in a concealed hangar bay, with arresting gear keeping the Rapidstriker from crashing! Various henchmen and technician types were scrambling all over the place and going for weapons racks

Galaxy Girl switched control of the Rapidstriker’s weapons systems over to Dr. Amazing, bailed out of her seat, and flew into battle as the defending henchmen opened fire. In a classic bit of A3 teamwork, Dr. Amazing covered them as Galaxy Girl used her amazing dynamorph powers to throw Brock at one hardpoint. Brock went full-scale and crashed into it like a mountain landing on a mole. He then picked up a large slab of wrecked material and used it as a shield to allow Dr. Amazing to exit the Rapidstriker, and Galaxy Girl covered their exit. As he ran on the telescoping legs of his waldo-harness, Dr. Amazing consulted a minute remote sensor monitor, capable of being held with only one hand!

“’ capable of being held with only one hand’?” Redford asked in a pained voice.

“Hey, it was the Sixties. Back then, that was dang small.”

“According to my readings, which are following the Cosmic Crystal’s unique geomagnetic resonance, the Crystal is this way, and there are strange power fluctuations. We MUST get there, before it’s too late!”

The Marvelous Man-Mountain threw all his gargantuan strength into crashing through the armored double-doors at the end of the hallway. Beyond the doors was a vaulting chamber full of huge electrical equipment. “Dr. Prometheus!” Dr. Amazing gasped, recognizing the chubby figure working feverishly at controls just beyond a thick plate of (presumably) bulletproof glass.

“Ah, Doc, that’s NOT what you should be worried about!” Brock said, pointing at the figure in the logistical center of the chamber. There, affixed to a technological crucifix of instruments and electrodes was Mephisto, stripped of his usual clothes, save the turban around his head. But, over his head, glowing with sinister power within an electronic cradle was the Cosmic Crystal! The Crystal bathed Mephisto’s head with his uncanny power, and while the middle-aged man writhed with agony, he seemed to be enduring the torment of his own volition.

“You’re TOO LATE, Messing!” Mephisto crowed. “I told you, the next time we met, I’d be a GOD! MAKE IT SO, PROMETHEUS!” The renegade scientist threw the (slightly stereotypical) switch, and the energy rose to a blinding cascade of unearthly POWER.

“Mel! Don’t!” Dr. Amazing cried out, but Galaxy Girl lashed out with all her dynamorph power and focused it into the Cosmic Crystal, hoping to destroy the glittering threat to global security once and for all. The Cosmic Crystal flared, and Mephisto’s body was wreathed and made incandescent with its power. He cackled triumphantly.

“Bad move, Mel,” Brock said fatalistically, “BAD MOVE.”

“Credulous FOOLS!” Mephisto bellowed in triumph. “Did you honestly think that I’d be foolish enough to think that apotheosis could be achieved with a mere crystal?” He broke free of the ‘crucifix’. “But I needed POWER, and in order to gain THAT, I needed the raw, devastating energy that only the dynamorph of the gorgeous GALAXY GIRL could provide! Thank you, my dear! I may not be a God…” his head pulsed, and his turban began to swell. It started to give and break, revealing a huge, vastly expanded skull with throbbing veins. “…but no longer am I a mere MORTAL!”

“You went through all of this for THAT?” Melanie said. “Mephisto, I hate to be the one to tell you this, but that look simply does NOT work for you.”

“I am no longer Mephisto, the paltry prankster and prestidigitator! Now, I am CEREBREX, MASTER OF THE MIND! Behold my POWER!”

Brock and Melanie clutched their heads as waves of barely visible power radiated from Mephisto - now Cerebrex’s - head. Brock went down almost immediately. Then Cerebrex focused his power on Galaxy Girl, and she went down. Dr. Amazing hunkered down and adamantly refusing to give in to the psychic assault. He sent his robotic arms at Cerebrex. Cerebrex ignored them and sent a bolt of raw psychic power at Dr. Amazing, sending the scientist flying.

Standing over the fallen bodies of the Amazing Three, Cerebrex let out a bellowing laugh of triumph. “FINALLY! After all these years! REVENGE! Prometheus! Strap them into the Enthrallment Chambers! Soon, the WORLD will tremble before the might of those who were once their greatest heroes, who are now my greatest SLAVES!” *BWAH-HA-HA-HAH!*

linebreak shadow

Redford strummed his fingers on the arm of his chair. “Okay, I know that the Amazing Three got out of that. How?”

“Oh, Messing wasn’t fool enough to go in there without backup,” Townsend admitted. “He sent a signal to the Challengers of Fate as he was going in, and I let the signal go unjammed. Heck, I boosted it. And, believe me, those yoyos took their time. I was running out of material, wasting time for them to get there and save the day! But, I had that many more witnesses to my new ‘super powered’ identity, so it was all good. Well, except for having to wear tights for almost twenty years. TIGHTS!” Townsend buried his face in his hands with shame.

“People really talked like that?”

Townsend shrugged. “It was the Sixties.”

“How did you…?” Redford held his hands around his head, indicating ‘Cerebrex’s’ enlarged cranium.

“You disappoint me, Dusty! I just wore a fake ‘enlarged cerebrum’-”

“No, not THAT, that was obvious! How did you do the bit with the ‘mental bolts’?”

“Okay, valid question. Look, the ‘Cosmic Crystal’ wasn’t really all that powerful, people just THOUGHT that it was. Y’see, it was one of those ‘power gems’, which had the ability to affect people’s perceptions of what happened, over a large area. The reason that everything went back to normal, the second that they got the ‘Cosmic Crystal’ away from whatever spandex wearing simpleton who had it that week, was that none of it ever really HAPPENED. It was all an ILLUSION, a SUGGESTION, things that I am - no brag, just fact - an Expert in. I knew exactly what it was, and how to use it. Messing and his buddies thought that I had fantastic, reality bending mental powers, so for all practical purposes, I DID. I used the ‘Cosmic Crystal’ to mess with the A3 for a while, and, after that, I just wore a blaster rig under the ‘enlarged cerebrum’ headpiece.”

“But… I thought that ray blasters weren’t cost effective. But then, why do supervillains keep giving their goons ray blasters and jet packs, if they’re not effective?”

Townsend nodded, conceding the point. “The Rule of Cool. We don’t TELL our mooks that they’re mostly speed bumps for superheroes, so when we give them high tech trinkets, they go, ‘Wow, nifty, keen-o supervillain stuff!’ and obey orders. We don’t tell them that the blaster they’ve got only has a three-shot battery, or that it actually does less damage than a regular gun does, or it sucks at penetrating armor. They pull the trigger, it goes ‘zap’, and they’re happy. You’ll notice that when the heavy hitters get serious, they pack a Heckler & Koch, or a .45, or a PPK, not a ‘Zap-o-tron’. Besides, being a supervillain is 90% about intimidation. And people get more intimidated by guys with fancy Buck Rogers hardware than they are with goons with Third World military surplus weaponry, despite the fact that the military surplus stuff is actually deadlier.”

“Why did you do it?” Redford asked.

“Well, just pulling a zap gun out and-”

“Not the GUN… Why did you obey the Red Brotherhood? I mean, they cut you loose. They just let you drift off into oblivion without lifting a hand to help you. You crawled out of the gutter by yourself - or at least with a hand up from your buddy Lazlo. So… why did you come running with then whistled? You don’t strike me as the lapdog type, so what’s with the ‘Yessir, yessir, three bags full, sir’ business? I’d have thought that you would have told them to shove it.”

Townsend smiled. “You don’t get it. First, I never expected the Masters to come help me. They were very up front about that, from the very beginning. Second, I understood where they were coming from. I had to go through that, for my own good. Hey, I do it to other people all the time; why should I be any different? Third, as I sobered up, I realized that on a certain level, I’d done it to myself. I’d had everything just the way that I wanted it, for a long time. I’d come to think that that was the way that it properly was, instead of that I was on a really hot streak. I hate that in rich people, so I had no excuse for it when I did it. And lastly, Nietzsche was right - what doesn’t kill you, makes you stronger - if it doesn’t cripple you, that is. Freddy kind’a spaced on that last bit. The Masters realized that, and when I walked through the shitstorm of my own making, they were waiting for me. In a weird way, they’d kept faith with me, almost as much as Lazlo had.”

“And what if the Dark Avenger was to suddenly pop through that door?”

“I’d blow his brains out, the murdering scumbag.”

Redford thought uncomfortably about that for a bit. “So… how was it, being back in the supervillain racket, after all that time?”

“Weird. And I don’t just mean the tights. What IS it about tights? And I was SO out of touch at first. You gotta understand, 1950 was pretty much still the Post-War era. I understood the Post-War era. And I returned in 1963, the real beginning of the Sixties. I did NOT understand the Sixties - well, yet. I completely missed the Fifties. Though, from what I got from Happy Days, that might not have been such a bad thing.

“First, supervillains had become their own thing. In the beginning, and even afterwards, the whole ‘supervillain’ bit was just another racket. You paid protection to the guys who ran the town, and you made sure that you didn’t piss in their punchbowl. If a ‘caped crusader’ was making things hard for the local mob, they called for a supervillain, and he either GETS the asshole, or he at least distracts the yo-yo long enough for the wise guys to take care of business. Back in the day, if you didn’t think that you could make it as a stand-up gangster, you could put on a Halloween costume, get a funky name, and try that for a while. A whole bunch of guys got their breaks as supervillains, and then ditched the goofy outfit, once they got some superhero who was pissing off the local mobs into a death trap.”

“That reminds me,” Redford cut in, “what was it with those ridiculous death traps? I mean, they were ludicrous! Did anyone ever actually DIE in any of those things?”

“As a matter of fact,” Townsend replied equitably, “YES! That was sort of the entire point! Look, there are three reasons to put someone into a death trap: to delay someone you don’t wanna kill while you take care of some business, to scare someone, or to kill them. The bit about heroes escaping from the death trap at the last second? That was usually just that the villain in question wanted to keep someone really busy for a couple of hours without actually killing them. So, you tie their girlfriend to a log and run it through the sawmill, a classic old melodrama bit. The point being, at the crucial moment, whoever you’re targeting has better things to do than fuck with you. As for scaring people - well, there are people, mostly snotty rich kids and middle class matron types, who just don’t GET that they can be hurt, that people would actually pull out a gun and SHOOT them. So, you throw a scare into them. You put them into the classic death trap, and arrange for someone to save them at the last minute. Mind you, it’s crucial that they don’t save themselves. Someone ELSE has to save them. It puts the fear of GOD into them. It works a lot better’n just shooting ‘em, because they’re helpless and they can see it coming. And lastly, as for just killing them? Why not just pull out a gun and shoot them? Well, mostly that’s a matter of making a statement. He died of a gunshot? That could be almost anyone, it’s almost boring. He’s ripped into a thousand shreds? He’s torn limb from limb by a lion? He’s sliced in two lengthwise? Now, THAT makes a statement! And, if you do it right, you can establish an alibi for yourself when it happens.”

“You mean, you actually killed superheroes? When?”

“Dusty, all those ‘near-escapes’ that you keep hearing about? That was the Hays Office version. In real life, we supervillains played for keeps. One of the reasons why there were so many short-lived superheroes was that they were literally short-lived. My personal favorite was the classic ‘thrown to wild animals’ bit. Just try and let a CSI lab tie a tiger to you.”

“But where do you get wild animals from?”

“Oh, all over the place, if you know how. Zoos. It’s always good to know people in the circus. The pound never looks at you twice if you ‘adopt’ a bunch of stray dogs. My personal choice is pigs.”

“Pigs?”

“Pigs. You take a bunch of pigs, don’t feed them for three or four days, and then throw a guy with an open wound in among them. They will RIP HIM APART and literally eat him alive! It’s also a great way of throwing a scare into someone. There’s nothing like seeing a loved one eaten alive by pigs to knock the starch out of somebody’s knickers.”

Townsend blinked and considered. “Where were we when got off on this? Oh yeah. Old school supervillains were mostly gangsters with a gimmick. But the new crew? MAN, talk about a bunch of divas! And everybody had super powers! And nobody just ROBBED anything anymore! Everything was this big huge apocalyptic battle! Hell, I saw more collateral damage out of one battle between the Amazing Three and the Living Inca in ’66 than I saw during all my operations during the 1940s! And people put UP with it! And politics! Everything was politics! Of course, it was the Sixties, and back then everything was political, one way or another… And WEIRD! It was like a weirdness competition, with bad guys working to out-bizarre each other. I mean, I thought that I was pretty bizarre with the pulsing head-thing, but not hardly. I mean, compared to Psimian, Modulex, Fearmonger the Living Nightmare, Dr. Nosfaros and Renton, I was downright vanilla!”

Redford held up a hand and said, “I hate to derail you again, especially when you’re answering one of my questions, but what was it with all the ‘alien invasions’ that happened during this time? I mean, from 1963 to 1971, you were practically tripping over alien invasions. But by 1993, the X-Files was a big hit on TV, with their ‘who knows?’ position on aliens. What happened?”

Townsend smirked and chuckled. “Ah, y’know, sometimes it seems like I had to do everything. But then guys like Dr. Hephaestus and gals like the Deathmaiden and Madam Terror come along. REAL PROS. Innovators! And not dinky little gimmicks, like most of ‘em! Real breakthroughs! Doctor Prometheus, the guy I used to set up the ‘Cerebrex’ scam, was a true genius! A true whacko, too, but hey, he hadda be, to pull off what he did! Doc Prometheus was a Schimmelhorn scientist; he came up with this protein-based plastic that he could use to create pseudo-flesh.”

“You’re saying that all those aliens were synthetic androids, created by this Dr. Prometheus?”

“Isn’t ‘synthetic androids’ redundant?” Townsend quipped. He waved that aside and said, “Yeah. Despite all the Divas, you still had guys who were working the ‘big distraction’ ploy. Hey, you need a small force of disposable ‘fish-men from Atlantis’? Call Doc Promethus. You need rubble-men from Saturn? Call Doc Promethus. You need ‘atomic mutants from the future’? Call Doc Prometheus. You need giant monsters that can wade through a downtown area? Call Doc Promethus. You need a zombie horde? Call Doc Prometheus. Heck, you need super-scientific android soldiers?”

“Call Doc Prometheus,” Redford answered for him.

“Bingo. Doc Prometheus did GREAT work, he was an artist, a craftsman and a professional. He took PRIDE in his work. His rates were good, his product was first-rate, and he was even easy to work with. Man, he was such an improvement on most of the assholes working the supervillain racket in the Sixties.”

“So, what happened to this Dr. Prometheus?”

Townsend quirked an uncomfortable smile. “Well, despite all his sterling qualities, Doc P was still a whacko,” he touched his temple significantly. “Like most Schimmelhorn cases, he got really pissed off if you called him that. It implied that what he was doing wasn’t ‘science’, just some weird fluke. And no scientist wants to be frozen out like that. He was convinced that his ‘syntheplasm’ was a huge breakthrough that was the next atomic fission, despite the fact that nobody else could MAKE the stuff. He got the big idea that he could craft a perfect body for himself - well, you gotta remember, he was this pudgy little shmoo of a guy - and that he could somehow download his mind into this perfect body, and be big and bad and get babes. Some time about, oh, 1978, the Doc just dropped out of sight. My guess is that he finally got a mind-transfer do-job going, tried it out on himself, and something went wrong. We’ll never know. Odds are, someone’s already found his lab, stripped it for the salvage, and dumped his body - or bodies - where they’re rotting, even as we speak. Damn shame, he was one of the good ones… Okay, he had a thing about tying up girls, but so what?”

“So, what was your favorite gig, during your ‘Cerebrex’ period?”

“None of ‘em. It was the pits! I mean, 1960s supervillainy had tons of drama, but no finesse! And I am all about the finesse. It was attack, attack, attack! Retreat, regroup and attack again! Attack with a new weapon, attack on different ground, attack with a new ally, but it was always attack! JEEZ! I don’t know how anything so violent could be so boring! And the money! ‘Cerebrex’ was a money pit!”

“But… you stole millions as Cerebrex!”

“Do you know how much ONE of those secret high-tech bases cost? I went through seventeen of them in the Sixties! If I hadn’t gotten into Covert Construction, ‘Cerebrex’ would have bankrupted me!”

“Covert Construction?”

“Yeah, I got so good at building secret hidden bases that I went into business building bases for other supervillains. ‘Cerebrex Construction, a name you can TRUST!’, that was my motto. Why do you think that all those bases looked alike, all ‘Danish Modern’ with poured concrete and chrome? It reduced my overhead costs for my own bases, and the money just poured in! And it was a damned good thing that I did go into Covert Construction, ‘cause it I made contact with people who I’d lost track of long ago.”

“Oh? Who?”

“Remember the Master of the World network? Well, when I was putting together a secret underwater base for one of those ‘acronym’ criminal spy networks that were all over the place in the 1950s and 60s, an outfit called The Network. Well, I like knowing who I’m dealing with, so I did some research. It turns out that the Network used to be the Technocracy cell of my old Master of the World outfit! Yeah, the network fell apart when I dropped out, but the more cohesive cells of the network struck out on their own and were working towards their own ends. Man, I got such naches when I learned that they used to be one of mine, and now they were out there raising havoc without me!”

“Naches?”

“It’s a Yiddish word. It’s like paternal pride, when you feel good ‘cause your kid scored a home run. Get this, I didn’t hear about it, ‘cause I was swimming at the bottom of bottle of booze, but in 1958, the Network hijacked two nuclear warheads from NATO bombers, and blackmailed NATO for a hundred MILLION Pounds - POUNDS, not Dollars! - in 1958! It didn’t work. MI6 sent a team of special operatives who found the warheads on a fluke. <sigh> Pity. It would have been great if the Network had shaken down the Brits for a hundred mil!

“Wait a minute,” Redford said severely. “That’s the plot of Thunderball, the James Bond movie.”

“And BOOK,” Townsend pointed out. “The book came first, though Fleming did write it with the intention of making a movie of it. Oh, Ian Fleming based SPECTRE on The Network, and a lot of the other ‘acronym’ syndicates that budded off from the Master of the World. Heck, he picked on The Network TWICE. He based ‘THRUSH’ for that silly Man from UNCLE TV show on The Network, too.”

“How did you feel, seeing all those former underlings having succeeded where you failed? I’ll bet that you were real burned up.”

“ARE YOU KIDDING? I loved it! Especially after having to put up with those meshugge pishers that passed for supervillains in those days! I was in Heaven when I dealt with those guys! They were MY kind of people! Tough, devious, sneaky, untrustworthy, backstabbing bastards! <happy sigh> And the sexy babes in tight clothing that they always had hanging around didn’t hurt any. And they were really rattling people’s cages, the way that the supervillains weren’t really doing anymore. Being Cerebrex was boring, so I got in on the Criminal Spy Network action. Using a few bits and pieces from my old network, I set myself up as The Prime Director…”

linebreak shadow

THE GIRL WHO NEVER EXISTED AFFAIR

“Greetings, Gentlemen,” said a chorus of voices from the screen, which showed five shadowy figures. “WE are the Prime Directorate of DAGGER. As you all know, DAGGER offers top quality covert operations goods and services, including intelligence, munitions, vehicles, secret base construction, esoteric equipment, sabotage, kidnapping, and other services for a reasonable fee. You are all here to witness and begin negotiations for DAGGER’s latest offering.

“While weapons of vast devastation are a prime concern, they have the drawback that by their very nature, you can only threaten to use them or use them. And using a weapon of vast devastation has weighty repercussions for those that deploy them. However, there IS a weapon that is almost as intimidating as a weapon of vast devastation, and can be used with little repercussion- the FANATIC.

“At DAGGER, we have perfected a process whereby mild-mannered, everyday persons, taken at liberty from the street, can be destroyed, reconstituted and remade into a living weapon of incredible deadliness. Their minds are wiped clean, their bodies reconditioned and retrained, they are given razor-sharp combat reflexes and their faces altered. BUT, most importantly, they are conditioned to believe that they had a warm, loving, caring family that they would do anything for, which had recently been cruelly murdered by a shadowy figure. This shadowy figure is the key to the Fanatic’s deadliness. When a name and a face is provided, the Fanatic will suddenly remember that THAT was the person responsible for his family’s death. And, then, the Fanatic will stop at nothing, absolutely NOTHING, to revenge himself upon his tormentor. He will kill not only the target of his loathing, but anyone who protects his target, even at the cost of his own life. He will use guns, knives, poisons, explosives, vehicles, ANYTHING, as long as it kills the object of his loathing. Even if he fails, he will keep trying, learning and improving, until he finally kills his target. And, best of all, there is NO WAY to connect the fanatic to the organization that sends him, unless they so choose to acknowledge it.”

The wall turned, exposing a window, even as the screen kept playing, revealing a training area. Men and women in white exercise outfits, each wearing a white hood that exposed only their eyes, with a box and antenna on the side, were going through the rigors of intense physical training. Some were doing gymnastics. Others were doing more conventional exercises. Others were training in Karate and Judo. Others were practicing with swords. Others were practicing with handguns and rifles. “Our recruits were chosen from people who were intelligent, clever and insightful, but lacking in personal initiative and motivation, who also lacked any meaningful intimate or familial connections, but missed them sorely. Now, they are kept in a near constant state of barely constrained rage, as they apply themselves to avenge the loved ones that never existed. All they lack to crystallize their rage into full deadly action… is an identity. A name, a face. Someone to blame.

“Indeed, one such trainee was so enraged, that she managed to escape and get to the mainland, to search for any signs of her family.” The screen showed a lovely dark-haired, gamine-featured woman strapped to a gurney, her head surrounded by electronic probes. “This, unfortunately, drew the attention of the French Service de Documentation Extérieure et de Contre-Espionnage, who sent their best agent, Operative Papillon, or Francine Coplan.” The viewer changed to show a cramped cell, with a lithe, panther-like woman in an almost skin-tight black leather catsuit restlessly prowling back and forth. “The trainee has been compromised. She no longer meets our exacting criteria for a ‘blank slate agent’. However, she is still valid enough to demonstrate the effectiveness of our training. Behold!”

The monitor shifted back to the scene with the trainee. The electrodes withdrew from the woman’s head, and the gurney tilted. Attendants unstrapped her. Appearing dazed, she stepped through a door into a pre-set tableau: a house, a normal, rather generic looking middle-class home, with the usual shabby comforts. Well, except for the bullet holes riddling walls, the shattered glass, and the dead bodies covered in blood artistically draped over the furniture. The girl stepped gingerly through the stage, reacting with horror and despair as she ‘relived her families deaths’. Then she came to a window, where there was a silhouette of a head. She stopped and stared numbly at the silhouette, as if trying to remember the face. Then a light clicked on, and a face was clearly visible! It was the face of French SDECE agent Francine Coplan! The nameless ‘trainee’ screamed and scratched at the window, but the light snapped off and a light over a door snapped on. The girl charged at the door with the rage of a berserker.

The monitor shifted perspective again, back to Coplan’s cell. The door to the cell opened with a click. Coplan immediately rushed the door, and seemed surprised and suspicious when there was no one there. Still she ventured out into the room. “We will allow Mam’selle Coplan the opportunity to escape the building before leading our weapon of execution to her presence. This will allow for first-hand viewing of the combat. Does that meet with your approval, Col. Malloy?

“Or should I say, TOWER Special Agent 447, Charles Vine?” A spotlight pinned one of the visiting ‘buyers’, a well-dressed trim man with blonde hair and an eye patch, and several armed guards trained machine guns on him.

“Dammit, Arkady, I TOLD you that we should have gotten better disguises!” the man said in a polished (if angry) English accent, directed at a rather rumpled Cuban-appearing man wearing fatigues with a bushy beard and a large Cuban cigar. “Play your trump card!” The ‘Cuban’ took the cigar from his mouth, and Special Agent 447 shielded his face. The guards reacted by opening fire on him. Charles Vine yelled “NO! You fools!” Everyone ducked to the floor and watched the cigar…

…do absolutely nothing.

Vine pulled his blonde wig off and threw it. It erupted in a bright light, followed by a thick nauseating smoke. A stiletto blade clicked out from one of his shoes, and he jabbed a nearby buyer, and then used him as a shield as he pulled out his Walther PPK. One of the buyers, a dark man in the dress of a Sikh, with the appropriate turban and beard, snapped at the guards, “Idiots! Is this the best that DAGGER can do? Let me show you how a REAL warrior handles pests like this!” He tore a DAGGER special submachine gun from one of the guards…

…and shot the other guards. As Charles Vine handled a few more of the ‘buyers’ in hand-to-hand while they choked on the smoke (he was using his eye patch as a gas mask), Arkady Gordieff, the false Sikh, relieved the buyer from the Ryugenzawa Ninja clan of some of the alleged ‘photographic equipment’ that he had around his neck. Then they fled the trap together, as Arkady fired off rounds behind him.

When they were safely out of sight, they paused. As Vine swapped out some parts for his Walther, turning the handgun into the famed TOWER carbine, Arkady grumbled. “Did you HAVE to pick the Cuban to take the fall for that?”

“Well, they knew that I was a ringer, so they probably figured that you’d be around too. Of the buyers, the most likely to be you in disguise was what you picked and the Cuban.”

“But I LIKE Cubans!” A few guards came scurrying down the halls. “You just picked him because he was a valiant soldier in the worldwide struggle against oppressive Capitalism!”

“Arkady, it was either him or YOU.”

“Then again, as a valiant soldier in the world-wide struggle against oppressive Capitalism, he was no doubt ready to surrender his life to strike a blow against the Fascism that DAGGER stands for.” Arkady let off a few rounds, but then the submachine gun jammed. “Damned defective DAGGER junk!” As Vine covered him, Arkady reconfigured the ‘camera equipment’ into a sturdier assault rifle, and slammed a section of a ‘lens’ into place as a drum of ammunition.

“By the way, Arkady, how did you get the Ryugenzawa guy to carry your junk?”

“GET him to carry it?” Arkady gave a deep Slavic laugh. “He paid me five thousand American dollars for it! I think that he felt conspicuous, so he was trying for the ‘Japanese Tourist’ look.”

“How very… enterprising… and capitalistic of you.”

“You just HAD to go and spoil my good day.”

“Very well, our priorities are to find Fran Coplan and save her from Jane Doe, then rescue Jane Doe from herself, and then find the research files on the brainwashing project,” Vine said authoritatively.

“I notice that ‘get our collective rear ends out of here in one piece’ doesn’t warrant a place on your agenda.”

“Well, we could always split up. You, go secure a boat off this rock. I’ll go find Coplan and Jane and the files.”

“No, no, no,” Arkady objected with a cynical chuckle. “Every time we do THAT, YOU wind up with the beautiful damsel in distress, and I wind up with a face full of motor oil. This time, we go together.” He popped a breath mind in his mouth hopefully.

“Very well, the holding cells are THERE…” Vine consulted a convenient map on the wall.

“WHY would they have a convenient MAP, just where we could find it?” Arkady asked suspiciously.

“Well, even henchmen and goons get LOST…”


Francine Coplan prowled down the corridor, every sense keenly seeking out any sign of the inevitable ambush or trap. It was obviously a trap, but the only thing more noxious to her than falling knowingly into a trap was passively remaining in her cell. She slipped through a door and found herself in a large open area that looked like a training area with obstacles and exercise equipment. Before she could turn, she heard the door click shut behind her. Oh well, it would be rather stupid to assume that they’d let her out, just to pull a rather prosaic ambush.

Francine stuck her fingers in her mouth and let out two long shrill blasts and then a shorter whistle, and then a long whistle that started high and trailed off low. A moment later, from somewhere, not too close, an answering whistle started off low and slid up to a high sharp note. As Francine was framing her next blast, she heard a loud growling roar from a human throat coming in her direction. Spinning, she spotted the girl known only as ‘Jane Doe’ charging in her direction, a look of transcendent rage on her face. Jane ran up to Francine, and without a word, leapt on her like a tigress. Francine rolled back with the force of the lunge and used the power of Jane’s own attack to throw her over. Francine immediately rolled back to her feet, and was just in time to block Jane’s onslaught. Guessing what had happened, Francine wasted no time trying to reason with the girl, but put all her focus into staving off the withering onslaught of punches. Jane’s offensive was powerful and lightning fast, but weak on tactics; she was running entirely on pure delusional rage. Francine hoped to wear her down and let her tire herself out. Unfortunately, Francine’s defense wasn’t as good as she was hoping, and Jane was getting in some jaw-rattling punches.

Francine’s stalling tactic only caused Jane to calm down slightly, and get her to use better tactics. Jane and Francine were exchanging high kicks when two men rushed in and tackled Jane. The man with the bad fake tan unwrapped the turban from around his head and used the cloth for restraints. As the turban man finished wrapping up Jane, his partner got up and greeted her urbanely with, “Agent Papillon, I presume. Tower Special Agents 447 and 512, respectively.”

Special Agent 512 got up and took Francine’s hand with a glow in his eye. “HE can be a number; I, on the other hand, am a free man. Arcady Illyevich Gordieff, a votre service, mam’selle.”

Vine pointed to one of the doors, where a line of DAGGER enforcers were pouring out into the training area. “Did you see which way she came from? She was sent directly from the conditioning lab.”

Francine pointed the way. Handing his carbine over to Francine, Arcady hefted Jane over his shoulder and carried her as Francine and Vine covered his exit. Once they were back inside, Vine looked about in annoyance. “There’s never a convenient map around when you really NEED one!”

“You’re looking for the brainwashing laboratory? It’s that way!” Francine said with certainty.

“How would you know that?” Arcady asked, even as they followed her directions.

“The head researcher showed the laboratory, and explained the procedure in detail.”

“WHY?”

“Pardon? He’s a lonely, middle-aged, what you would call ‘Boffin’, and he’s been stuck on this island for the past two years without a vacation. He JUMPED at the chance to explain it all to a pretty girl!”

A few minutes later, they stormed into the laboratory and quickly took out the researchers. As Vine transformed his waistcoat into a carrying sack for the six binders of laboratory notes, Francine raided a refrigerator for samples of drugs and picked out one phial. She loaded a syringe with the contents of the phial and injected it into Jane’s posterior, over Jane’s loud muffled objections.

“Sedative?” Arcady asked clinically.

“No, it’s an amnesia drug, what they use to ‘erase’ inconvenient memories and poor starts when they’re conditioning their instant fanatics. She should sleep for a few hours, and she won’t remember anything that’s happened in the last half-day. Hopefully, when she wakes up, she won’t feel it necessary to rip me apart with her bare hands.” Jane stiffened and collapsed.

That done, the three of them loaded as many of the hell-drugs and serums into the lab’s biological waste destruction oven as they could and set the oven to overload.

Arcady was the first out the door, but he blanched and quickly shut it again. “We might have been premature with that oven…” he hedged.

“How many?” Vine asked, guessing that the lab was being covered by DAGGER guards.

“I couldn’t count. All that I saw was a honeycomb of gun barrels.”

“Well… we’re in a laboratory…” Vine mused. “Maybe we could whip up something nasty, before they decide to shoot down the door…”

But his chemical ponderings were cut short by the sound of explosions, followed by the sounds of hand-to-hand combat, mixed with cries of pain and terror.

“Bojemoi!” Arcady said, pulling back from the door. “What have those DAGGER fiends unleashed?”

Vine winced. “It sounds like they’re getting mauled out there, poor devils.”

“It sounds like one of the very fiends of HELL has been let loose on them!”

Then the sounds of combat faded, and the door opened. A perky female face, framed by a wide white Stetson ‘Cowboy’ hat poked in. “Hey, Frannie!” She said in a broad Texan accent. “Yew okay?”

“It’s a thousand times worse,” Arcady grumped. “It’s an American.”

“Gentlemen, this is my backup,” Francine said. “Meet Ellie Mae Jenkins, from the Federal Utility Bureau of Advanced Research and Reconnaissance.”

“’When everything’s FUBAR-ed, call for FUBARR!” Ellie Mae said with the tone of one reciting a motto.

“Hold on,” Vine said sternly. “FUBARR? SDECE? This is supposed to be a Top Secret base! Does everybody know about this island?”

“Well, I haven’t seen anything from the CIA,” Francine said.

“All THAT means, is that they aren’t selling tickets!”

“Enough jaw-jackin’, let’s GO!” Ellie Mae shooed them out of the lab.

Arcady looked at the none-too-small arsenal that Ellie Mae was carrying. She was carrying an assault rifle with an underslung grenade launcher, there were at least three heavy pistols strapped to her, several grenades, at least four demolitions packets, a Mac-10 machine pistol, and she had a sniper rifle slung over her shoulder. “What? No bazooka?” he asked puckishly.

“Don’t be redickle-dockle!” she snapped. “I left THAT on the boat!”

“You have a boat?” Vine asked.

“Sure! What d’you think I’ve been doin’ for the past three days?”

“You’ve been there for three days?”

“Yeah! Frannie here let herself get caught, so’s I could find her with the transponder in her bridgework. She’s been workin’ the inside, and I been workin’ the outside. Hey, I may be a little forward, but I’m not stupid enuf to try to sneak onto this island dressed as one of those sleazebag buyers they was bringin’ in t’day, or something corny like THAT.”

Vine and Arcady shared a look. “Oh, of course not,” they said in perfect unison.

The four spies (plus the unconscious Jane) battled their way out of the stronghold. Every so often, they would encounter a barrier, only to discover that either Francine had the exit code, or that Ellie Mae already had it wired with explosives. It appeared that Ellie Mae really enjoyed explosions. They finally got to the island’s dock, only for Vine and Arcady to gape in frustration at Ellie Mae’s choice of vehicle. As the DAGGER guards tried to pin them with gunfire, Arcady roared in exasperation, “Of all the boats on this stinking pier, you chose THAT one?”

“What’s the matter with it?” Ellie Mae asked. “It’s light and fast, and it has four drums of extra fuel!”

“Yes, but it’s blocked by THAT boat!” Francine pointed at the yacht that had brought Vine and Arcady with the real buyers. “There’s no way to get OUT!” With a hurt look on her face, Ellie Mae pulled a remote control from her utility belt, pulled out the antenna, and hit a toggle. When a light flashed green, she hit a button, and the yacht erupted in a rattling explosion that knocked most of the DAGGER goons off their feet, broke the yacht in two, and promptly sank both halves.

“Is that your answer for EVERYTHING?” Vine asked acerbically.

“Yew got a problem with success, Fancy Pants?” Then she hit the throttle and sent the speed launch out from the dock, and put it in full gear once they were clear of the wreckage.

When the launch was a half-mile away from the island, there was a deep rumbling, and the volcano suddenly erupted, sending ash and flames and lava everywhere. As the spies watched, the entire island sank beneath the waves. Ignoring the acidic stares of the three others, Ellie Mae got up and yelled back at the island, “Oh, gimme a BREAK! I KNOW that I didn’t use THAT much C-4!”

linebreak shadow

Redford held up a finger. “Okay, in all your stories, you somehow managed to get over on the ‘heroes’ - well, except for the one with the kids and the dog. But from what you’re telling me, you pretty squarely LOST that encounter. Or was there something else? Like maybe the ‘Instant Fanatic’ process was bogus?”

Townsend smiled and nodded. “You’re catching on. No, it was quite real, all right. But the Masters, in their exalted wisdom, decided that they didn’t want that technology to be developed for whatever reason. So, I snitched copies of the process from TAROT, who were the ones who really came up with it, and beat them to the market. Or, at least, I made it SEEM that way. I arranged for sweet, tragic, mysterious ‘Jane Doe’ to escape, and all the rest. So, the three agencies involved were fully informed as to the process’ components and all that. When they heard that TOWER, FUBARR and SDECE all had the details on the process, TAROT junked it.”

Redford chewed that over for a bit. “Excuse me… but WHY were those secret bases ALWAYS on volcanic islands? And WHY did they ALWAYS erupt, just when the place was getting raided?”

Townsend chuckled. “Well, that was me again. Remember, I was making money as Cerebrex, building secret bases? Well, one of the invaluable services that I provided was volcanic islands, custom-built to order.”

Redford felt his eyes almost bugging out of his head. “How…?” he said raggedly, “How… do you build a volcanic island… to customer order?”

“Volcanax!” Townsend answered, as if that answered anything. “Google him. Volcanax was a supervillain that I worked with on and off, who had ‘volcano powers’. Don’t ask me how he got them, or how they worked, ‘cause I don’t know. Powerful as hell, had a temper like a… well… volcano… and dumb as rock. But, he had the power to reach into the magma somehow and bring it to the surface - again, don’t ask me how, I’ve tried to figure out how he did it, and it just gets dumber and dumber every time I try - and use it to do stuff. And, he had the rock-bottom common sense to get money from me to either increase the size of existing islands or raise entire new islands from the seabed. Mind you, that was the only common sense I ever saw in him. He always needed more money for one harebrained scheme or another. The problem was that those islands weren’t very stable. If they weren’t kept stable by an elaborate techno-dohickey, the island would erupt and sink. Guess what was the most delicate and power-intensive piece of equipment on any of those island bases?”

“So, James Bond or Nick Fury or whoever comes crashing in, messes with the equipment on general principles, shoots stuff up, and inevitably, the thing that keeps the island stable goes, and BOOM?” Redford extrapolated.

“That WAS the way it tended to go.” Townsend confirmed. “Volcanax blew up one time too many in ’80, and I haven’t heard from him since. Dunno what happened to him. Yeah, I really enjoyed the whole ‘super-spy’ scene. Mind you, the ‘white hats’ weren’t that much better than the ‘black hats’, but all in all, it was a very groovy scene. Which reminds me - once I got the hang of the Sixties, I saw a golden opportunity. Even while I was doing the ‘Cerebrex’ and ‘Prime Director’ gigs, I noticed that the American Youth Movement was rapturously sitting at the feet of the Maharishi - mostly because George Harrison was doing it, and anything that the Beatles did was cool by definition. So, I set myself up in San Francisco as ‘Doctor Nirvana’.”

“’Dr… Nirvana…?” Redford searched his memory. “Oh… you don’t mean…”

“YEP! It was the ‘Dr. Vice’ and ‘Bacchus’ scam all over again, only this time with a healthy dose of Peace, Love, Harmony, Sex, Drugs and Rock’n Roll. I had the Woodstock Nation by its BALLS, and they were lapping it up!”

“How? You were SEVENTY! Ten years before that, you were on a protracted binge that must have played hob with your body! How could you keep up?”

“With the utmost pleasure!” Townsend gloated. “Dusty! You forget! Remember that ageriatric treatment of the Brotherhood’s that I told you about? The one I was slipping to Marla? Well, she wasn’t the only one… I took that myself. I was pretty much in my physical prime, despite my long tour through the skids. Besides my mental powers, I also have pretty fair control of my body. And not just MY body, either. Dusty, with absolutely no fear of bragging, I am FANTASTIC in bed. I can do things to a woman’s body that Andres Segovia only wished he could do to a guitar. It’s one of the things that I learned from the Red Brothers. With the merest touch, I can cause a woman to cry out in pleasure or pain - or both - and make her love it! Take that, a decent line of pseudo-Zen bullshit, and my usual bag of mental tricks, and I had the hottest babes in California begging to be my, ah, ‘disciples’.” Townsend grinned evilly.

“And when you had all the hot hippy chicks flocking around you, all the hard-up guys in the area weren’t far behind. And you got your hooks into them with mind tricks and drugs.”

“Thank you, Dusty, I knew that you were beginning to pick up.”

“Says you! You said that I’d get why you’re telling me all this as we went along, but I still don’t get it. You’re a wealthy, respected and powerful man; nobody has the slightest idea that you were Mephisto, let alone all your other personas, yet you’re implicating yourself left and right in crimes that would get you the hot shot in the most Liberal state in the Union. WHY are you telling me all this?”

Townsend smiled indulgently. “Believe it or not, Dusty, you’re doing fine. Let’s see… the whole ‘super-spy’ thing had pretty much ran out of gas by the time that Nixon got through trashing the American economy by trying to have guns and butter. The recession also pretty much killed the ‘counter-culture’, and there went Dr. Nirvana as well. Still, I managed to get a TON of blackmail out of the ‘Dr. Nirvana’ gig, which is still doing me a lot of good.”

Townsend pursed his lips. “Let’s fast-forward through the Seventies… to be honest, it was a pretty boring decade. Between the recession, the oil crisis, the gelding of the space program, terrorism, the rampant distrust of the establishment, and disco, people were doing a pretty good job of making themselves miserable. They sure as hell didn’t need ME. Oh, I was busy enough as Cerebrex, but that was just ‘wham-bam-pow’ as usual. A lot of noise, a lot of running around, but nothing really happened. Well, except for the ‘Mood Ring’ thing, and the less said about that, the better. Okay, I dragged both Vanguard and Crimson Dragon out of the trunk and dusted them off, just to see if I could make them work again. Sadly, I could.

“To be honest, I spent most of the time at the Monastery, training. Nothing really interesting happened… until, let’s see… Oh! Satanikos!”

“Satanikos?” Redford echoed. “You had something to do with Satanikos, the alleged head of the… international… Satanic… child abuse and pornography… ring… that’s supposed to… permeate… the highest levels of power, world-wide…” Redford’s statement ground to a rattling stop as the implications registered. “Oh, of course. Of course, you were Satanikos. It had your fingerprints all over it. The hysteria, the wild accusations, the ‘evidence’ that proved less than nothing, the blanket slander of anyone and everyone, the suggestions of abject corruption at the highest levels of government, church officials making total fools out of themselves, all the smoke and fury, all of which meant absolutely NOTHING, other than a bunch of people being ruined, and a lot more people looking foolish. You really had a good time with THAT one, didn’t you?”

“See? You ARE catching on. But, as a matter of fact, that time, I was the good guy.”

“YOU were the GOOD GUY?”

“You say that is if it were so unlikely.”

“How do you justify messing with the heads of little kids, so they’ll go spouting off about ‘Satanic’ rites and being touched in odd places and all of that?”

“Please!” Townsend sounded genuinely insulted. “I DO have standards! I didn’t mess with the kids’ heads… I messed with the psychiatrists’ heads, which was easier, a lot more fun, and fair game.”

“And how does putting not only the daycare workers, the parents, random authority figures, and, oh yes, over a thousand Pre-K kids through a trial by media constitute ‘being the good guy’?”

“Simple. It prevented a REAL Satanic conspiracy from getting the kids.”

“What?” Redford bleated flatly.

“It’s called the ‘Grand Hall of-”

“You’re telling me that there’s a REAL Satanic conspiracy out there?”

“Okay, ’Satanic conspiracy’ implies that they worship Satan, and they act in concert to spread the influence of the Infernal. The Grand Hall of Sinister Wisdom is more accurately a cabal of Diabolists - not Satan worshippers, but Diabolists - who traffic with demons, and they’re pretty much in it for themselves, not for His Infernal Lese Majeste. Still, the blood of young children is a primo medium for negotiating with the Pit. I got word from Sidney Reilly-”

“Sidney Reilly? ‘The Ace of Spies’? The WWI super-spy? But he’s dea-” Even as the word formed in his mouth, the realization came to Redford. “Oh, of course he’s not dead. He’s still alive. And, let me guess. He’s a Red Brotherhood agent.”

“See? You ARE starting to get it!” Townsend said pleasantly. “Yeah, Sid is a Brotherhood agent, like me - only a LOT sneakier. As I was saying, Sid Reilly had gotten wind of a plot by the Grand Hall to set up a system where corrupt family services officials would expedite the seizure of specific children - demons can be SO picky about their meals - rubber stamp the background checks of adoptive candidates who were ‘buying’ for the Hall, and then lose the paperwork on the kids who got ‘bought’. Now, I’ll admit that the Brotherhood doesn’t play nice. Hell, by the standards that the vast majority of the populace subscribes to, we’re evil as hell. BUT, we have the long-term good of the human race at heart. Selling kids to the Pit does NOT serve the greater good in any way, shape or form. There is shit even WE don’t put up with, and the Grand Hall is a textbook example of what we don’t put up with.

“The Masters put out a general call for a plan to scotch this, and I came up with Satanikos. I pushed the right buttons, made the right appearances, made the right threats, and flares went up all over the world. There was a big hubbub, and the Grand Hall went scrambling for cover, ‘cause people were out looking for anything that even LOOKED vaguely satanic. They shut down and laid low for the better part of ten years, and they make a point of not adopting out kids, ‘cause the authorities are still watching that.” Townsend chuckled. “Oh yeah, and I stirred up things so much that it didn’t die down for ten years, and I had the Religious Right making total fools of themselves on camera, every chance they got.”

Redford paused and thought about that for a while. “Okay… I guess that you can say that that was… sort of good… I guess.”

“So much for playtime,” Townsend said.

“Excuse me?” Redford bleated nervously.

“Chill out, Dusty. I mean, that by then, I was tired of Cerebrex and the whole ‘Cape and Cowl’ scene. I mean, it was just so fucking childish! I looked at my so-called ‘peers’ with utter contempt! Hey, it was the EIGHTIES! I wanted to reach out and affect the lives of millions of people, testing them, messing with their heads in a far more effective way - the CORPORATE way!”

“Is this about how you became Thomas Townsend?”

“Yep! See? You’re learning! For years, I’d been putting forward to the Masters a plan to build… well… THIS!” He picked up a remote and one of the screens started flashing logos and inset-shots of various branches and offices and enterprises of Townsend International Communications and Entertainment. “Ever since the Thirties, and my ‘Master of the World’ network, I’d been keenly aware of how international communications affects things, on so many levels. Most of my little ‘performance art pieces’ had me playing with the media in one way or another. Look at how I used TV to help convict Doc Wilde! I was able to use computers as no one at the time had even thought of, and I saw the potential for far greater ways to mess with the world’s information using them. People tend to think of me as a relic, something left over from a bygone era… And, on a certain level… they’re right. On another level, I saw all of this at its crudest beginnings, and I saw it grow. I know things about the world’s telecommunications network that even The PALM doesn’t know!”

“The Palm? Dr. Abel Palm? But he’s… oh, never mind, shutting up.”

“Good. After my Satanikos opus, the Masters agreed that I’d learned enough as ‘Cerebrex’, and it was time for me to graduate to, ah, more advanced studies. I’d been laying the groundwork for TICE since the Sixties, stashing away caches of money, and blocks of stocks and bonds in certain companies, slowly accruing huge holdings in strategic areas. I’d used ‘Cerebrex’ and various other supervillains to attack specific financial blocks, under the cover of all those inane feuds and stunts, emphasizing certain technologies and brands and locations at the expense of others. I’d gained valuable information - and blackmail - through the Prime Directorate, and my other contacts in the criminal spy networks, while they were still running. In the 1970s, I hired a good looking, personable kid named Chet Buchanan to attend Harvard Business School under the name ‘Thomas Townsend’. I’d given him this whole big buck-and-wing about how I wanted a guy inside the Wall Street establishment who was totally beholden to me, and the putz bought it. In ’82, just a few months after my final personal appearance as ‘Satanikos’, the Masters contacted me and gave me the good news - not only were they ‘graduating’ me to higher level operations, not only were they letting me drop that idiotic ‘Cerebrex’ act, not only were they giving me the green light for THIS, BUT! But they were giving me a whole new body!”

“Whole new body?” Redford squeaked. “They can DO that?”

“Yep! They’d been brewing up this beauty in one of their labs somewhere for years, waiting for me to be ready for it,” he swept a hand, indicating his body. “Not only was it brand-spanking new, in absolutely perfect physical condition, not only does it have genetic predispositions to stuff you only WISH you could have, but it is laced and reinforced and enhanced by nifty little implants that even Science Fiction hasn’t gotten around to thinking up! I could go toe-to-toe with most superheroes, and win on style and precision in a fair fight. <snort!> Like I’d ever get into a fair fight!”

Moved by a morbid curiosity, Redford asked, “Diiiddd… Did they somehow do that bit where you swapped your mind with the, ah… construct…? Or did they… <gulp> remove your… brain… and implant it into the, ah, body?”

“To be honest? I’m not sure… I don’t think that the question is really relevant to the answer. I think that it was something… beyond… either of those. I asked the Masters, and they told me ‘you’ll understand when you can understand’. I get that a lot from them.”

“What happened to Chet Buchanan?”

“Oh, I dropped him down a hole somewhere. Not a big deal.” Townsend grinned. “Of course, I had to clean up old business. Especially ‘Cerebrex’. Now, I don’t think that I’ve made any secret that I really didn’t like the Cerebrex identity. At first, I just used that stupid ‘increased cerebrum’ headpiece, with the pulsing veins and all that. But, like I said, the less time that I personally spent as Cerebrex, the better I liked it. So, I had Doc Prometheus whip up a ‘HYUGE brain/ withered little body’ droid that flew around in a flying chair, sort of a really nasty RC ‘Charlie McCarthy’ with built-in weapons. When the Masters told me that it was finally time to graduate, I arranged for one last ‘Battle Royale’ with the Amazing Three, The Justice Front, Pack Omega, the Legion of Light, and the Challengers of Fate. Oh, and I invited the Blood Swarm, the Legion of Darkness, the Power Lords, the Masters of Science, and a handful of the more egregious independent divas and piddling little pishers of the supervillain community to the party as well. I threw EVERYTHING at them! World domination, a mind-enslaving ray, robotic battle octopuses, RC zombie legions, android demons, all of it backed up by an Apocalypse Ray! What the FUCK an ‘Apocalypse Ray’ is supposed to be, who KNOWS? All of this aboard a giant flying citadel with death traps and robotic sentries and giant spinning tops of doom! All of this narrischkeit was basically so I could break a CLUE BAT over ‘Doctor Amazing’s head! FINALLY! Finally, after NINETEEN YEARS, Mister ‘I’m-ever-so-smart, I even amaze myself’ finally figures out that the whole ‘Cerebrex’ thing was a SCAM! JEEZUS! And he makes these noises like he’s made this brilliant deduction… please

“So, I pause for a second to let that stunning revelation sink in. As Messing’s doing his ‘oh, I knew all along’ LIE - hell, I had him from the word ‘Go’, and he knew it- I dropped a monitor screen and ‘congratulated’ him for only taking nineteen YEARS to figure it out. Then I hit the button.”

“Boom?” Redford asked.

“Nope,” Townsend gloated, “Click. Every window, door, gate and portal in the ‘citadel’ slammed shut, and the engines that lift the whole thing cut off. DROP! THIRTY THOUSAND FEET! WHAM!” Townsend slapped his flat palm on the desktop. “Those the landing didn’t kill were stunned to helplessness. The impact sheared off most of the exterior crap, which caused the actually very streamlined ‘citadel’ to sink another twenty thousand feet into the deep Mid-Atlantic. The air vents opened up. The ‘citadel’ was actually a huge drowning cage. The air escaped. Almost everybody drowned.”

“But… the Amazing Three escaped…”

“Yeah. So did most of The Justice Front and the Legion of Light. Tough on Pack Omega and the Challengers of Fate. And almost all of the supervillains, too. But I didn’t put all of that together to get them.”

“Then… who DID you arrange all that to get?”

“The Shadow Cabinet.”

“The… Shadow Cabinet?”

“The Shadow Cabinet was a cabal, formed of the leaders of what passed for the supervillain community back then, the team leaders of the Blood Swarm, the Legion of Darkness, the Power Lords, the Masters of Science, and a couple of ‘Super Genius’ independents. All of whom were there at that ‘Battle Royale’. Oh yeah - and me, as Cerebrex. They thought that they were the ones who were really calling the shots. But that’s not why they died.”

“Okay, I’ll bite - why DID they die?”

“THIS,” Townsend waved a hand at the map of his commercial empire. “Arranging all of this was a very long, very complicated, very involved matter, and, well, things happened. Complications, accidents, unexpected developments, and, I’ll admit it, a few mistakes were made. Point is, first Black Friday found out one aspect of it, then before I knew it, Lord Despair, the Packmaster, and the Prime Scientist all knew about it, and they all wanted a piece of the action. So, I sold them on this big ‘we’re going to take over the world, using the International Banking Community to do it’ scam, and they chucked in major funds and assistance in making it all happen. Of course, there was no way that I was going share this with those yahoos. So, in one fell move, I got rid of them and my debts, and I cleaned up most of the bigger losers in the supervillain community.”

“Okay… I can see why you got rid of the ‘Shadow Cabinet’… but why did you kill all those other supervillains?”

“Because they were CLOWNS! They were fucking embarrassments! The First Wave supervillains were big and theatrical, but they understood the principle ‘take care of business’. The Postward supervillains were PROS! The super-villains of the 1950s were stupid, but they pretty much killed themselves off. But the supervillains of the 1960s? IDIOTS! They were a bunch of overgrown KIDS in silly costumes, PLAYING at being supervillains! I had to put up with that shit for twenty years! It was like one long rerun of ‘Batman’! They were totally inept, but somehow, they just wouldn’t DIE! They just kept coming back! They were tying up all the sponsorship and financial support, keeping newer, more effective supervillains from taking their place!”

“Supervillains… have… sponsors?”

“Sure! Supervillainy is all about the sponsorship, and the ‘Silver Age’ villains were hogging all the money. Once I got that pack of morons off the playing field, suddenly you had this new wave of Eighties-style supervillains showing up. These kids? They had a clue. They knew how to take care of business. Yeeaaahhh…”

“But how were you sure that the Shadow Cabinet is dead? As you pointed out, Silver Age villains had a nasty habit of ‘coming back from the dead’. How can you be sure?”

“Because, I MADE sure. I had them tracked seven ways to Sunday. I did all the ‘cross/double cross/ triple cross’ comedy routines, and I sent robotic drones down to recover their bodies. The bodies of each and every one of the Shadow Cabinet was recovered, identified and destroyed, just in case. They are dead, PERIOD, not comin’ back, ever, end of discussion.”

“Well… it must have been a great change for you… quitting supervillainy cold-turkey that way…” Redford quibbled.

So, who says that I gave up supervillainy?” Townsend’s voice became a smooth, velvety monotone that managed to convey a paradoxical menace mixed with perfect control. “I just traded up to be a more sophisticated, more Eighties kind of supervillain. One who actually WON.”

Redford jerked in barely constrained panic as he recognized the infamous voice and looked to see that Townsend had been replaced by a shadowy figure whose features were completely obscured by shadow, except for the eyes, which somehow were completely visible in the gloom, and glittered with malicious amusement. “DOMINUS…” Redford croaked.

Actually, I’ve never answered to that name. Of course, this persona has no real name. The Media has given me that name. Then again, in a very real sense, I AM the Media these days, so…” The darkling figure chuckled.

Redford palmed his face. “Oh of course! The dark, mysterious figure who never personally appears, the cryptic messages, the enigmatic inexplicable acts that create seemingly pointless havoc and leave hundreds dead in their wakes, the insinuations of being the power behind those in power, the abject lack of any perceivable agenda… you’re just recreating your ‘Master of the World’ scam again, aren’t you?”

Townsend returned to his normal seeming and chuckled. “Okay you got me. See? You ARE catching up! Yeah, but this time, I’m doing it RIGHT! This time, I actually DO have real power over the Business and Political worlds. This time, I actually DO have dozens of teams of hideously well-trained ‘shadowmen’ who really DO appear out of nowhere, operate in perfect synchronization, and then disappear without a trace. This time, I really DO have access to information at the very highest levels of clearance. This time, I really AM untouchable. This time, I really DO have the power to reach out and destroy almost anyone, from the Grand Hall of Sinister Wisdom to the Vatican. This time, it’s NOT a bluff.”

Townsend picked up his remote and keyed one of the displays, the one showing his communications/entertainment empire. “Look at it. Townsend International Communications and Entertainment. TV, news, webcasts, cable, music, sports, events, movies, books, magazines, comics, nightclubs, PR firms, advertising firms, theatre, Broadway, think tanks - if it molds popular opinion, either I got a finger in that pie or I’m working on it. And this is just what I’ll COP to! This is just the tip of the iceberg. I control archives, R&D labs, private investigation firms, private security companies, insurance companies, credit reporting firms, fiscal analysts, logistical analysts, efficiency experts, universities, and chains of brothels and ‘massage parlors’. Hell, I even sponsor a couple of superhero teams. And all of it pours sensitive information back to the Masters.”

“You must be… VERY busy…”

“I’m an expert at delegating authority. Being a great judge of character helps. It also helps that I know when a subordinate is planning on pulling something, just by chatting with him about football for a few minutes.”

“And you’re also one of the most feared supervillains on the planet in your spare time.”

“Hey, a guy’s gotta have SOME fun! To be honest, most of my time these days is tied up running the Syndicate.”

“The… Syndicate? Are we talking about Organized Crime? Or the…”

“What used to be the ‘Syndicate Sinister’. The largest and most powerful - and best run - of the ‘Supervillain Unions’.”

“There really IS a ‘Supervillain Syndicate’?”

“Sure! How do you think supervillains GET all that cool stuff that they need for their schemes? Secret bases don’t build themselves, you know. And abandoned warehouses? Do you know how hard it is to find a decent abandoned warehouse these days? And vetting and training henchmen is a big part of what we offer, as well as a range of well-trained mercenaries. And, of course, we offer accurate information on a wide range of subjects.”

“WHY do you bother? I mean, you’re all about chaos and confusion and all that - why do you go to such lengths to get supervillains in the field?”

“Because, the more supervillains in the field, the more gets done. The more that gets done, the more confusion and chaos, and the greater the chance that specific individuals will wake up and get a clue, which is the Red Brotherhood’s entire POINT.”

Redford gave Townsend a pitiable look. “Mister Townsend – Mephisto - Mister Meitner - whoever you are… WHY did you bring me here?”

Townsend smiled broadly. “Because, I wanted to discuss my hobby.”

“Your… Hobby…”

“Sure, I LOVE my work, but everyone needs something to take their mind off things. It’s my hobby- and my legacy.”

“Your legacy…”

“Yeah, it’s a condition you get from having too much money. You start thinking about how all this is gonna go away when you die, so you start thinking about leaving something that will last, some mark on the world. It’s sort of a way of buying a kind of immortality.”

“And what will your legacy be?”

WORLD WAR THREE!

What?

“Dusty, let me set you a paradox. Why is it, that despite a mind-boggling rate of progress over the last fifty years, the world is still so screwed up? I mean, communications are better, agriculture is better, medicine is better, manufacturing is better, hygiene is better - all these things that logically should result in a better, happier world. So, why is the world still such a crapsack? And don’t give me any crap about shifting between technological bases or social paradigms or any of that - I’ve been hearing that for thirty years, and I am a master of bullshit; I know bullshit when I hear it, and that has flies buzzing around it.

“And another point - the Red Brotherhood has been pulling their stunts for centuries, and, let’s be perfectly honest - we have more fucking zombies stumbling around than ever. Why?

“The simple, ungodly fact of the matter is that we have too many people on this mudball spinning silently in space. If America and China prove anything, it’s that SCALE MATTERS. When you have that many stupid, shiftless, selfish people stumbling around, they can clog up ANY system, no matter what it is, whether they vote or not. When they try to do ANYTHING with that many people, governments reflexively grant themselves more and more power, figuring that that’s the only way that they’ll get anything done, until they become actively TOXIC.

“AND, just to illustrate my point, let me give you a carefully guarded little insight that may just crack your cosmic egg - speaking as one who’s dealt with both sides closely on many occasions, let me tell you that the most visionary, most dynamic, most effective, most selfless, most courageous, most HEROIC people that I have met in the past thirty years… have been supervillains.” Townsend extended his remote control, and the monitor displaying news display focused on one tiny panel, blowing it up to fill the screen. The panel showed a lithe woman in her mid-twenties, who had a ‘girl next door’ charm about her, wearing a red-white-and-blue leather jacket with jeans. She was leaping nimbly about a group of armed men with body armor, and she was clearly getting the better of them. “THAT is Payback, the ‘Scourge of the Appalachians’. She is beating the crap out of a team of hired goons who are harassing union organizers among farm workers on an AgriBiz farm. She is wanted for Bank Robbery, Arson, Vandalism, various computer crimes and nine counts of murder. With her powers, she could become a mercenary and make a mint. Instead, she’s out there, putting her perky little ass on the line for the poor folks of the mountains, who are STILL getting their asses handed tothem.”

Townsend clicked the remote again and the display changed to show a man in golden faux-Grecian power armor, with a gaudy purple cloak, who was directing a phalanx of men in body armor as they stormed out of a dropship. “That is Typhon. To look at him, you’d say that he was a textbook example of a comic book megalomaniac. But, under all that high-tech armor beats the heart of a true crusader. Everything that he does is to ferret out a horrible, pernicious corruption and destroy it. I back him 100%.”

Townsend clicked the remote again. This time, the screen showed a man in white ‘Arabian Knights’ robes, with gleaming gold-and-black accessories, who was doing strange things that battered men in khakis around. “That is Al-Rasheed, who’s devoted his life to battling the corruption of the Petrocrats of the Middle East, who exploit Radical Islam to distract the fellahin from the fact that the wealth from the sales of oil is going mostly into numbered bank accounts of the elite of the region. If you ask the Arabic new media, he’s a murderer and a thief, and possibly possessed by a demon. If you ask me, he’s the greatest hero the Middle East has seen since Saladin.”

*Click!* “THAT is Dr. Leonides Daibliku, aka ‘Dr. Diabolik’, a scientist who has stepped outside the law, in order to pursue an agenda that he hopes will elevate mankind to an enlightened, space-faring race. Thank GOD for men like him; they may very well save the human race from itself.”

*Click!* “THAT is Crucible, a man who endangers hundreds - and himself – at a time in the hopes that some of those people will be forced to rise to new heights to save themselves. His support organization is made up of people who had been his victims; they’re first rate. My kind of guy.”

*Click!* “THAT is Brigand, a man who has devoted the past thirty-plus years to kicking over the apple carts of corrupt businessmen and government officials. Everywhere Brigand goes, there’s scandal, corruption and disgrace. He doesn’t cause it, he just has an uncanny knack for finding it. He’s had help from the Red Brotherhood, but he doesn’t know it… probably. He’s our kind of supervillain, and he’s an example for the entire country.”

“The Dogman in India, Madam Terror, the Last Brave in the Dakotas and Saskatchewan, Schwartzwulf in Germany, La Jaguar de Oro in Mexico, dozens of others like them, they’re all ‘supervillains’. They break the Law, doing what they think needs to be done. They’re the real heroes, not the yahoos in capes who get photographed with the mayor. Now, I ask you - WHY do they have to go outside the law?

“Why? Because the SYSTEM is overloaded with PEOPLE! Malthus was right. You give people enough to eat, and they’ll breed until they starve or someone kills them. Unchecked population automatically equates to massive poverty. Massive poverty results in poor education, which is an anathema to a democracy. Larger labor pools mean that the wealthy and powerful can play the poor off against each other, and scoop up more and more of the wealth for an ever-shrinking circle of elites. The elites hold onto as much wealth as they possibly can, depriving the tax base of desperately needed money.

“The system is creaking and lurching and unraveling at the seams. Everybody knows it, everybody sees it, but nobody does anything about it. Why? Because, the only real solution is to DECREASE THE POPULATION!”

“Decrease the population’?” Redford echoed. “Or, ‘Kill a lot of people’?”

“Six of one, half a dozen of the other,” Townsend replied bleakly. “I don’t like it. Nobody does. That’s why we have villains, to do the dirty work.”

“How… by how much are you going to ‘decrease the population’?”

“Oh, I figure, given the human race’s tendency to breed like rabbits after a war or plague, right about two billion.”

“You’re going to KILL TWO BILLION PEOPLE?”

“No, two billion was the number that will survive.” As Redford goggled aghast at that, Townsend continued. “It’s going to happen, whether I do anything or not. Hell, I’m surprised that things have held together as long as they have! Every year that it doesn’t all just unravel like a cheap rug, I’m genuinely shocked. It’s GOING to fall apart. Period. We all know it. But, there is a technique that’s used in engineering and several other fields, called ‘Destructive Testing’, where a breakdown is caused on cue, while the unit is being watched, so that it can be dealt with in a controlled way. Instead of trying to prevent it, which always only delays the inevitable and makes it worse when it does happen, the breakdown is caused when the people, conditions and resources are perfect to get it back up and running. Instead of at some random time, which will always be at the VERY worst time, when no one’s there to deal with it, it’s CONTROLLED. THAT is what I intend to do.”

Redford started to object, but Townsend overrode him. “Okay, I thought about a plague, but once the cat was out of the bag, there would be no way of controlling events. I thought about engineering a massive famine, something that would wipe out entire crops. But, famines take too long, and to be honest, what crawls out of a famine situation is usually that the very worst types take charge. And believe me, I know the very worst types. You do NOT want them in charge. And the Red Brotherhood is all about getting people to get up and improve themselves. So, why not find a way where people either improve or die? Leave it up to them?”

“I thought briefly about finding the Grand Exalter’s ‘proto-evolution ray’ and rigging it to a satellite, but the more I thought about it, the worse an idea it turned out to be. So, Famine, Pestilence and Weird Science wouldn’t work, so what does that leave? WAR!”

“You want a Nuclear War?”

“Oh, don’t be ridiculous! No! I just want lots of CONVENTIONAL warfare, on every continent of the Earth. No ‘Fortress America’ this time, with the US and Canada exporting munitions and soldiers, and Latin America going, ‘world war… tisk, tisk, tisk… go get ‘em, Sam…’

“The more I think about it, the better war looks. Unlike famine and disease, war brings people TOGETHER. It makes them bond in adversity.”

“Yeah, so they can kill people,” Redford objected.

“Hey, after all the alienation and isolation that TV has caused, I’ll take what I can get. Best of all, War acts as a kind of crucible! You send a boy off to war, and he comes back a MAN!”

“Or a cripple, or a corpse…” Redford interjected.

“Hello? Creating corpses is sort of the entire point of the exercise? And as for the cripple bit? If anything that works just as well. It’ll be a boon to cybernetic and regenerative research. They’ll have hundreds of millions of people begging to be test subjects! No, I’m serious about this! Remember World War II? Remember the way the American people got up and gave their all for the war effort? Well, barring the Zoot Suit Riots, the Port Fort Chicago Riots, the Harlem Riots, and a few other race riots…

“And war has a wonderful way of burning away at the deadwood. And believe me, Dusty, the world is up to its eyebrows in deadwood. Remember Smokey the Bear? What that furry fink never told you, was that forest fires are part of the natural order. Fires burn away the dead wood, and spark new growth. You stop forest fires, and the forest gets choked with dead wood, and rot sets in. That’s what we’re seeing in the world today, Dusty… rot. It’s too late. We’re way over populated, and the only thing to do is burn away the rot, and let the new growth happen.”

“But you’re going to KILL BILLIONS of people!”

“Dusty, it boils down to whether you believe that it’s better to have many billions living in squalor, or one or two billion living decently. Squalor doesn’t suit the Masters’ agenda. Poverty has a way of grinding people down and making them accept it as the just way things are.”

“How do your masters, the Red Monks, feel about this?” Redford asked warily.

“Good Question,” Townsend allowed. “I’m not sure. I’ve been sending them proposals about it every so often for the past seven years or so, detailing different angles and themes for it: the Anti-American Crusade, the Anti-Chinese Crusade, China vs. India with the rest of the world taking sides, the Global Jihad, the Anti-Mutant Cleansing, the AI Crusade, the Second Cold War, the Anti-Undead Crusade, the great Neo-Nazi Uprising, the great Resource War, the Petroleum War, and like that. But so far, no decision. But they’ve been asking for more details on various proposals, so I think they may be giving this serious thought. Just think, Dusty, with luck, in your lifetime… World War Three! Filmmakers will have material for centuries…”

Redford looked at Townsend as though he’d lost his mind. “And what if your masters finally say ‘No’?”

“Oh, then I shelve it.”

“Why?”

“Hey, I could be wrong! The Masters know more than I do, and this is a very important decision. They have a deeper understanding of the big picture than I do. I leave it to them.”

“If they know so much, then why is it so important that you feed them more information?”

Townsend nodded. “A valid question. You ARE coming along. Look, the Masters’ understanding is very DEEP, very existential level. They see the big picture, they see how it all flows together. However, as profound as that understanding is, it still needs DETAILS, in order to be really useful out in the real world. I, on the other hand, have this huge bag of details that we only have the vaguest contexts for. One of the greatest challenges that spymasters have is putting all the information they have into the proper context. You can know something, and still not know what it means. So, I give the Masters this constant flow of detailed information, they use that deep understanding to put all of that into context, and BINGO! They have this very clear picture of what’s really going on.”

“So… they have this really clear picture of what’s really going on.”

“Pretty much.”

“And what IS going on?”

“Damned good question,” Townsend said, suddenly looking very human. “I wish I knew. I guess that I’m just gonna have to wait until I retire full-time to the Monastery to find out.”

“Do you WANT to retire?”

“Oh, HELL Yeah! I’m not ready yet, but I’m looking forward to it.”

“Why?” Redford asked. “You have it ALL! You are God’s own rich, you have more power than any man has any right to, nobody knows that you were Mephisto or Dominus, and you just admitted that you love your work!”

“Dusty? C’mere,” Townsend beckoned Redford over to the window. When Redford was standing by his side, Townsend indicated the street below, and then the city in general. “Look out there, and what do you see? NEW YORK! One of the greatest cities in the history of mankind! A prime center of finance, commerce, culture, learning, political power, and entertainment! But you know what I see when I look out this window? I see a high-rise playpen, full of five million kindergarteners playing with blocks, finger paints and dollies. I used to love this town… back when I first came here, EIGHTY YEARS AGO.

“Dusty, I have grown up! Or, at least, grown more mature. And it’s not just the years, or the mileage… When I signed on with the Red Monks, they taught me these wonderful powers of the mind. But here’s the catch… I just don’t think like I used to. I admit it, when I first started out with the Brotherhood, I was strictly in it for the cash and the action. But ‘action’ gets old after a while, and y’know how they say, ‘money can’t buy everything’? Well, for once they were right? And they say that sex is only really good if you really care about the one you’re boffing? Again, they’re right. Who knew? I’ve played ‘hide the salami’ with hundreds of women in my life, but I only made love with Marla Fontaine. Kicks? Man, I had kicks, pulling all those scams as Mephisto, and I just got bored. I mean, all my friends were hoodlums. In the Sixties, I thought that trading up from the rackets to being a ‘real’ supervillain as Cerebrex would be great. Y’know what? That was even MORE boring! Dealing with the supervillains was like being stuck in a room with a bunch of squabbling KIDS!

“So, I ‘traded up’ to being Thomas Townsend… And, I’ll admit, it’s been better. But lately, I’ve realized that all I’ve really done is swap one set of rackets and hoodlums for another. AGAIN! Believe me, some of the ‘movers and shakers’ of Wall Street make my old buddies, the first supervillains, look like choir boys.

“Y’wanna know the only thing that gives me any real satisfaction these days?” Townsend waved Redford back to his chair. “THIS.” He clicked the remote, and both screens showed a kaleidoscopic shuffling of facts, pictures, graphs, charts, and other information icons. “Raw data. Every so often, when I’m looking at this, something just clicks, and it all falls into place for just a moment. But just a moment! For that moment, I GET it! For that moment, it’s like I see a finger. And I know that it’s connected to a hand, which is connected to an arm, which is connected to a human being, which is doing something that I have NO IDEA of what it is. Past that, everything is a jumble.

“Dusty, when I first went to the Monastery, I was bored out of my fucking mind! There was nothing to do, but sweep, weed, mend, collate data, and prepare the blandest most boring food you could imagine. There was this one guy, who just sat on a bench in the garden, looking into a bowl of water, while he shucked chickpeas for the gruel. You know what? It’s taken me ninety years, but I finally get it. All this?” Townsends swept a hand around the office. “The money, the luxury, the booze, the broads, the power… they’re all distractions. The Red Brothers? They GET what is really going on. WAY DOWN. DEEP. Way past all the distraction, and misunderstanding and preconceptions. They see it, they GET it. They are the ones who are really at work in this world. Guys like me, and Sid Reilly and Dillinger and the others? We’re goons. Smart goons, dangerous goons - but still… goons.

“Dusty, I don’t wanna be a goon anymore. I’m just not satisfied with toys and games and naps anymore. I admit it… when I first signed on, I was in it only for myself. But I’ve learned better since then. I believe, really BELIEVE in what the Red Brotherhood is doing. As much as I complain about what a crapsack world this is, when I think back to right after World War I… people really ARE better! They’re better educated, more aware, more in touch, more responsible, and more caring. Back then, if someone hadn’t lived in your small town, or in your little neighborhood for twenty years, they weren’t really a person. They were fair game for anything. Not so much, these days. It’s taken a lot of hard knocks, a lot of suffering, but mankind really IS improving. I’ve done… horrible things… I admit it… But that’s what it takes! A drill instructor doesn’t break down a recruit and make him into a soldier with sweet talk and gentle reason; he gets up in their faces, makes them see their limitations and gets them to get past it.

“Dusty… I wanna SEE a better human being. I want to be a real part of it, making that better human being. I want to be one of the Red Brothers. I wanna kneel in the dirt, weeding a garden, while my mind, undistracted by all THIS, goes deep past the obvious, into the REAL.”

“Dusty? NOW do you understand why I’ve told you all of this?”

Redford flushed and shook his head. “No. Not a clue. If anything, I’m more confused than ever.”

Townsend leaned against his desk. “Oh? Remember THIS?” He pointed at the strange lighted device, which gave out an eye-splitting flash again, just as it had when Redford had first come in. As Redford spasmed, straps zipped out of the chair he was sitting in, securing him hand and foot in the chair. “Okay, Dusty - or, should I say, Arthur Wexler, you are hypnotized. Arthur, you’ve probably been told that what you see about hypnotism in movies and TV is total bilge, that hypnotism is purely a matter of advanced suggestion, and that it won’t affect you if you don’t let it.

“BULLSHIT! Hypnotism is EXACTLY like you see it in movies and TV. You have NO POWER over your own mind. You are COMPLETELY at my mercy. The entire reason that I went on and on like this, was to let the drug in the scotch that you’ve been swilling take effect.”

“But you said that you’d never pollute good scotch!”

“And you BELIEVED ME?” Townsend snickered malevolently. “Okay, first things first. When you came in here, you were asking about ‘Mephisto the Mystic’, someone that I have gone to no small lengths to put behind me. Nobody cares about Mephisto anymore. WHY do you want to know so much about Mephisto? And where did you get all that information? As sketchy as it was, I’ve done a very good job of erasing all files, dossiers, photographs, articles and even mentions of Mephisto from all records. But, when I asked you what you knew about ‘Mephisto’, you referred to me once as ‘Meitner’, though I hadn’t told you that yet, and I KNOW that it’s nowhere on record. Where did you get all that information? WHERE did you get that NAME?”

“Jeffery Baines Armbruster. He thinks that Mephisto is still alive and planning something big. Apparently, he was right.”

“Jeffery Baines Armbruster?” Townsend mulled over the name. “Jeffery Armbruster? Jeff Armbruster? Jeff Armbruster, the All-American Kid? Is that smug little snot still around? What am I talking about, it’s been sixty years, he’s an old man by now.” Townsend pulled a keyboard over and typed in entries. “Jeffery Baines Armbruster. All-American Kid. Huxton High School. Wheaton College. Strategic Bureau of Intelligence. God, it seemed like I’d never be rid of that little punk, and now he’s back and pissing in my beer again…” Files appeared on the two monitors, including three photographs, one of a handsome young man that looked to be from the 1930s, another of a handsome man in his prime, and the third of a rather shrunken and bitter looking old man. “Ew,” Townsend flinched. “So much for clean living. Oh. Nasty car accident, back in ’83, huh? Killed your wife, and one of your grand-kids. Tough on you, Jeffy. So, you’re eighty-plus, retired, and a boring old fart who nobody wants to listen to anymore, huh? So, you decided to dig up old Mephisto, and remind everyone that you used to be a real hotshot, and handled real live supervillains, huh? Wait a minute… 1983…” an evil grin spread across Townsend’s face. “Heh, heh, heh… Okay, yer gonna really need to chow down those Wheaties to get out of THIS one, Jeffy…”

“Okay! Artie!” Townsend returned his attention to Redford - or, rather, Wexler. “That first flash placed you in a state of mild hypnosis. Everything that I told you is sort of encapsulated between the first and second times that I flashed you. You will remember NOTHING of what I told you then. NOTHING. Not only will you NOT remember, but if you TRY to remember, you will face THAT-” Wexler’s chair spun around to face the two monitors, which joined to project a hologram mass of primordial horrors, which, combined with the subliminal sounds being blasted into his ears, induced a near-pants-wetting state of fear in him. As Wexler calmed down from the hysteria, Townsend flashed him again. “Okay, Artie, if you try to remember ANY of what I told you, you’ll have to face THAT again. You will AVOID any association or thought that even comes NEAR any of that.

“Now, to help it all go down better… Mephisto? Mephisto was a PUNK. A nothing. A schmo. His only real talent was for getting out of jail and staying alive as long as he did. He was never part of the Master of the World network - there never WAS a Master of the World network. It was an urban legend, passed around by street thugs, to impress each other and baffle the police. Mephisto kept trying to be more, but in the end, all he really was, was a second-rate vaudeville stage magician, desperate for one more curtain call. Even that idiotic ‘Cerebrex’ trick of his didn’t fool anyone. He was a joke, to the very end. He wound up pissing off everyone, so he disappeared. In keeping with his nature, he decided that he needed a place to hide where no one would think to look for him. So, he decided to take over the life of Jeffery Armbruster, the respected journalist, by arranging a car accident that injured his face. Everyone said that good old Jeff wasn’t the same after that accident, that he seemed to become an old man, overnight. They put it down to the shock of losing his wife and grandchild. But no, it was Mephisto, acting like a geriatric changeling, taking over the life of a man who’d caused him so much grief. But Mephisto, being the cheap attention whore that he is, couldn’t lay low forever. No, he needed one last hurrah before he got shipped off to the old folks’ home. He needed someone to write up Mephisto as the greatest supervillain of the Twentieth Century, just so that he could die knowing that he’d fooled everyone. How pathetic. You’re not going to buy into that. If anything, you’re going to EXPOSE Mephisto as the bully, coward, liar, cad and thief that he is. You’re going to RUIN him…” Townsend flashed Wexler again. “Of course, that’s what you expected me to do, wasn’t it, DARK AVENGER?” Townsend pulled a .45 automatic, seemingly from nowhere, and pointed it at Wexler’s head. As Wexler panicked, Townsend pulled the trigger.

But there was no shot. As the last of Wexler’s resistance crumbled in his panic, a silent beam of energy lanced from the ‘handgun’ and passed through a section of Wexler’s brain, resulting in a state of ‘supreme suggestion’. Townsend leaned into Wexler’s gawping face, reaching forth with all of his mental prowess. “Yesss… the Dark Avenger… he’s behind all this, isn’t he? There’s no way that an overaged PUNK like Jeff Armbruster could find all of that out… No, it was the Dark Avenger… Hoping to draw me out, using Jeff Armbruster as bait… He took over Jeff Armbruster’s life, KILLED Armbruster’s wife and grandchild, just to get at ME. And he sent YOU. He sent YOU… to DIE in his place. After all, how OBVIOUS could it be? ‘Dustin Redford’? A composite of the names of the actors who portrayed Woodward and Bernstein in the movie adaptation of ‘All the President’s Men’? How OBVIOUS! It could only be a TRAP. For ME. I was supposed to think that you were the Dark Avenger, come to trick me into revealing myself by hypnotizing you, and spilling forth all my little secrets to you. <heh, heh, heh> I was supposed to BUY that, get you into just this position… and then kill you, when you were supposedly helpless for just a moment, as you defeated my conditionings. He didn’t send you here as an agent… he sent you here as a SCAPEGOAT! You were supposed to DIE, so I’d think that I’d finally killed the Dark Avenger, and let down my guard, so he’d finally be able to GET me. He USED you! He wanted you to DIE for him. Doesn’t that make you ANGRY?”

“YES!” Wexler answered.

“Doesn’t that make you want to get EVEN?”

“YES!” Wexler repeated.

“Doesn’t that make you want to KILL?”

“YES!” Wexler shouted.

“WHO are you going to KILL?”

“The Dark Avenger!”

“And WHO is the Dark Avenger?”

“Jeffery Armbruster!”

“Good, this was getting boring.” Townsend flashed Wexler again. He tucked the ‘.45’ away and returned the monitors to their usual position. He waved a phial of an olfactory agent under Wexler’s nose and brought him to.

As Wexler shook his head, Townsend helped himself to a scotch from the wet bar. “Good Scotch, huh? I think I’ll help myself as well; it must be five o’clock somewhere.”

Wexler cleared his head. “So, Mister Townsend… why DID you ask me here?”

“Okay, the reason why you’re here, is that I’ve learned that you’ve been digging around for facts, cold hard facts about a *ahem!* ‘supervillain’ of the nineteen twenties-through-eighties called ‘Mephisto’.”

Wexler perked up. “You know about Mephisto the Mentalist?”

“Also called Mephisto the Mystic, the Marvelous, the Malevolent, the Mad, and practically every other alliterative M, except maybe ‘Meek’ or ‘Mellow’.”

“Really?” ‘Dusty’ leaned forward intently, “What do you know about him?”

“Not much. Just that he’d make for a GREAT documentary, just the sort of thing that I like to take a personal interest in. Keeps me in touch with the process. You get a little… encapsulated, up here in the head office. Now, Mephisto… he sounds like a GREAT subject. Flashy, ruthless, had a LONG career, faced off against some of the greats of his time… There’s some GREAT stuff there.”

Wexler shook his head. “Nah. Not really. Mephisto? Mephisto was a PUNK. A nothing. A schmo. His only real talent was for getting out of jail and staying alive as long as he did.”

“Oh? What about the rumors that he might have been a part of that mysterious ‘Master of the World’ thing that had people all tied up in knots before World War II? You know, nobody’s ever even proved that there WAS a ‘Master of the World’ network, yet official documents of the times are full of mentions of it.”

“Oh, Mephisto was never part of the Master of the World network - there never WAS a Master of the World network. It was an urban legend, passed around by street thugs, to impress each other and baffle the police. And as for Mephisto, well, he kept trying to be more, but in the end, all he really was, was a second-rate vaudeville stage magician, desperate for one more curtain call. Even that idiotic ‘Cerebrex’ trick of his didn’t fool anyone. He was a joke, to the very end. He wound up pissing off everyone, so he disappeared. I have an idea as to where he’s been hiding, but I’m going to have to ask you to leave off on any documentaries, until I’ve nailed down real proof on the murdering bastard. Believe me, Mister Townsend, the last thing that that cheap attention whore deserves is a documentary about him. But, know this… I’m going to going to EXPOSE Mephisto as the bully, coward, liar, cad and thief that he is.”

“Oh well,” Townsend sighed, “Just goes to show what I know. I guess that I’m just another suit, after all. Sorry to have wasted your time.”

Townsend’s Executive Assistant showed Wexler to the elevator. Townsend watched Wexler in the elevator on one monitor, even as he shifted to his ‘Dominus’ persona, and made a connection with the other monitor. “Open Channel D,” he said in his silky monotone. A face appeared in the monitor. “Agent B-43, the subject Arthur Wexler is now leaving the Townsend Complex. Initiate a Level 7 pursuit and surveillance, with Level 9 displaced monitoring, and the possibility of a Level 12 intervention. Do nothing, except observe and report on any and all developments, until further orders.”

“Understood, sir.” The face saluted and disappeared.

Townsend chuckled. Well THAT was fun! A lovely bit of pure bullshit. Just enough facts, just enough truth, just enough half-truth, just enough spin, just enough information control, just enough drama, just enough pathos, and a whole lot of CRAP. Anyone who managed to get at any of that would be swimming in fantasy land for years. He’d set enough hooks, traps, blinds, and poison pills in that mess that he’d be able to know when anyone was poking at it. He’d been setting false evidence for years, so most of it would ‘grandfather’ in as the truth. He wondered who really sent Wexler. It was probably nothing, just Jeff Armbruster trying to be the big hero again. If so, then he’d just get a double-barrel blast full of humiliation right in the face for his efforts. But then, it might be something more. If Jeff Armbruster wound up dead, then it might mean that the Dark Avenger was finally making his move. And if THAT happened… well, then the game was JUST BEGINNING.

Townsend grinned. “Give ‘em the old… rrraaazzzllle-daaazzllle…

FINIS

Read 12354 times Last modified on Saturday, 21 August 2021 02:14

Comments

0
sgs
2 years ago
I enjoyed your story but I think you should sue qanon for plagerism
Like Like Reply | Reply with quote | Quote

Add comment

Submit