“No,” Prof said. “A sword. The slontze is carrying around a bloody sword.”
I covered us while Prof tied on a bandage. He could use his Epic powers to heal himself, but every use of his powers would push him toward darkness. In the past he had offset that by using only a smidge of power to heal from wounds, accelerating the process but not bringing him too much darkness. He could handle a little bit at a time.
“Guys,” Val’s voice cut in, “I’m setting up infrared surveillance of the building. I should have intel for you soon.”
“You all right, Jon?” Tia asked.
“Yeah,” he whispered. “Fighting in this place is crazy. We’re likely to shoot one another in here. Mizzy, how’s that bomb?”
“Ready, sir.”
Prof stood and steadied his rifle against his good shoulder, the one Obliteration hadn’t stabbed with his sword. Prof didn’t often carry a gun. In fact, he didn’t often go on point. I now knew that being in the field risked forcing him to use his powers to save himself.
“David,” he said to me, “go fetch the bomb.”
“I don’t want to leave you in he—”
“Regalia says that you actually killed Steelheart.”
We both froze. The voice had come from the darkness of the forest. A wind blew through one of the windows, rustling leaves.
“That is well,” the voice continued. “Someday, I presume, I would have needed to fight him myself. You have removed that obstacle from my path. For that, I bless you.”
Prof gestured curtly to the side with two fingers. I nodded, moving that direction. We needed to be close enough to cover one another, but far enough apart that Obliteration couldn’t pop in near the two of us and potentially fry us both with one burst. I didn’t know how long Prof’s shields would hold up against Obliteration’s heat, and I wasn’t exactly eager to find out firsthand.
“I have told Regalia,” Obliteration continued, “that I will kill her someday too. She doesn’t seem to mind.”
Where was that voice coming from? I thought I saw a shadow move near a tree that bulged with glowing fruit.
“Guys,” Val said into our ears, “he’s there, right in front of David. I can pick out his heat signature.”
Obliteration stepped out of the shadows. He touched a tree and it frosted over, the leaves shriveling. The entire thing died in an eyeblink as Obliteration absorbed its heat.
This time, I didn’t shoot him. I took a chance and shot at the ceiling.
Dust rained down.
Prof fired also. He shot at the ground near Obliteration’s feet.
The Epic looked at us, dumbfounded, then thrust out his hand, palm first.
A shot through the window whizzed over my shoulder and took Obliteration in the forehead—or the glowing outline of his forehead, as he vanished. I glanced back through the window. Mizzy waved distantly from her position on a nearby rooftop, holding her sniper rifle.
“What was that about?” Prof demanded. “Missing like that.”
“Dust from the ceiling,” I said. “It fell all over him, covering his shoulders. Tia, if you run my video feed, you might be able to tell if the dust ported with him when he vanished. That will answer your bomb question, Prof—whether he teleports with objects automatically, or if he has to choose.”
He grunted. “Clever.”
“And your shots at his feet?” I asked.
“Wanted to see if his danger sense triggered when he thought he was in danger, or if it triggered when he was actually in danger. He didn’t port when I wasn’t trying to hit him.”
I grinned across the room at Prof.
“Yes,” he said, “we’re very similar. Go get Mizzy’s bomb, you slontze.”
“Yes sir.” I scanned the room one more time, then ducked out the window, with Prof covering me. We’d moved away from the bridges, however, which put me on a wide ledge suspended ten or so feet above the water.
I looked down at those dark waters, stomach lurching, then forced myself to edge along until I got to a bridge. The nearby rooftops had become a ghost town. The people had all fled, leaving only smoldering tents and glowing paint.
I reached the bridge and crossed quickly, taking cover beside Mizzy. She handed me a glove, which I put on. That was followed by an innocent-looking package, square, roughly the size of a fist.
“Don’t drop it,” Mizzy said.
“Right.” Dropping explosives: bad.
“Not for the reason you think,” Mizzy said. “It’s coated with adhesive. The glove is no-stick, but anything else that touches the bomb will stick to it—including our bad guy.”
“Sounds viable.”
“I’ve got the mother signal; don’t get more than three or four rooftops from me.”
“Right.”
“Good luck. Don’t blow yourself up.”
“Like I’d blow myself up. Again.”
She looked up at me. “Again?”
“Long story.” I shot her a grin. “Cover me as I head back.”
“Wait a second,” she said, pointing. “I’ve got a better vantage from the next building over.”
I nodded and she started scuttling that way across a very precarious rope bridge. I turned back toward the building where Prof was, the one with the jungle inside. Using my scope and its night vision—which was kind of hard to do one-handed—I scanned the area.
There was no sign of him or of Obliteration. Hopefully Prof wasn’t hurt.
He’s practically immortal, I reminded myself. It’s not him that you have to worry about.
I looked back over my shoulder and saw Mizzy reach the other end of her bridge—and then I heard screaming. From the building where Mizzy had just arrived.
“David,” Mizzy’s voice said in my earpiece. “There’s something going on here. I’ll be right back.” She disappeared from view.
“Wait, Mizzy—” I said. I stood up.
And found Obliteration standing beside me.
13
I raised my rifle one-handed, but Obliteration slapped it aside and grabbed me by the throat. He lifted me off the ground by my neck.
Sparks! He had enhanced strength. None of my profiles mentioned that either. I was so panicked I didn’t even feel pain—just terror.
Despite that, I managed to reach out and slap Mizzy’s bomb onto Obliteration’s chest. He didn’t vanish. He just looked down as if curious.
I struggled in his grasp, growing more frantic as he choked me. I pried at his fingers in a fruitless attempt at escape as Obliteration casually kicked my gun away across the rooftop, then pulled my earpiece out of my ear and dropped it. He felt at my jacket pockets until he found the mobile there, then squeezed it between two fingers.
I heard it crack inside my pocket. I thrashed and writhed more frantically, gasping for air. Where was Mizzy? She was supposed to be watching my back. Sparks! Prof would still be inside the jungle, hunting Obliteration, Val supporting him. If I couldn’t reach Tia on the mobile …
I had to save myself. Make him vanish, I thought. The bomb will go off. I punched at his head.
He ignored my weak battering. “So you’re the one,” he said, thoughtful. “She spoke of you. Did you really kill him? A youth, not yet a man?”
He let go of me. I dropped to my knees on the rooftop, my neck burning as I inhaled a ragged gasp of air.
Obliteration squatted down beside me.
Plaster dust on his shoulders, a piece of me thought. When he ports, he takes things that are touching him along. That spoke well for the bomb.
“Well?” he asked. “Answer me, little one.”
“Yes,” I gasped. “I killed him. I’ll kill you too.”
Obliteration smiled. “Behold also the ships,” he whispered, “which though they be so great, yet are they turned about with a very small helm.… Do not sorrow for this end of days, little one. Make your peace with your maker. Today, you embrace the light.”
He took hold of the shirt under his trench coat
, then ripped it off—bomb included—and tossed it away. Strangely, underneath he had a bandage wrapped around his chest, as if he had recently survived some severe wound.
I didn’t have time to think about that. Sparks! My hand darted toward Megan’s gun, but Obliteration grabbed me by the arm and hoisted me into the air.
The world spun around me, yet I was lucid enough to notice when he held me out over the waters. I looked down at them, then struggled more frantically.
“You fear the depths, do you?” Obliteration asked. “The home of leviathan himself? Well, each man must face his fears, killer of gods. I would not send you to the undiscovered country unprepared. Thank you for slaying Steelheart. Surely your reward will be great.”
Then he dropped me.