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After the Golden Age (Golden Age 1)

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Breezeway didn’t keep falling, however. He stopped short, dangling some twenty feet under the helicopter.

“Paula, can we have a replay on that? What just happened?”

Back at the studio, the technicians worked their magic, magnified the image, enhanced it, and replayed it.

The police had fired a net, like something a big-game hunter would use to catch his quarry. Weighted at the ends, it flew at Breezeway and entangled him as soon as it struck. The net remained attached to a rope, which was connected to a winch inside the helicopter. The cops hauled him in as if he was a fish.

Breezeway struggled, swinging under the helicopter until they pulled him inside, but his power was wind and flight, not strength. The net trapped him.

“They got Breezeway,” Celia said, amazed, staring at the monitors.

The others joined her, equally entranced by the replay of the cops’ triumphant moment. Typhoon stood next to her, her shoulder newly swathed in clean bandages, holding the injured arm to her chest.

“Damn punk,” Olympus muttered, but he didn’t sound terribly righteous.

Gina ended her report. “We’ll be back as soon as we confirm that Breezeway is in police custody, and if they decide to reveal his secret identity. Back to you, Paula.”

Arthur said, “Celia, turn to the other station. That one, yes.”

Celia switched the sound over to the station that was covering the search in the harbor district.

“… missing officers have been found.”

Celia’s stomach clenched. She looked at Arthur, who watched the screen and gnawed at his lower lip.

“One of the officers was found clinging to the base of a pier a hundred yards from where he’d disappeared, with minor injuries. Unfortunately, the second officer was not so lucky. The body of Officer Douglas Grady was pulled from the river moments ago. Reports from the scene confirmed he drowned when a tidal wave swept him into the harbor. The police have issued a statement that Typhoon is now wanted for murder.…”

Typhoon turned away from the monitors and found the nearest chair. Lowering herself into it, moving in slow motion, she murmured, “It was an accident. I swear to God it was an accident.”

Arthur moved to her side. “We know, my dear. Look at me.” She closed her eyes and shook her head, until Arthur took hold of her chin and directed her. “Look at me.”

With the weight of his power behind the words, she couldn’t help but obey. Trapping her gaze in his, he murmured, “Sleep. Very good.”

She slumped into his arms without so much as a sigh.

“You didn’t have to do that,” Celia said, too tired to sound as irate as she wanted.

“Perhaps not,” Arthur said, easing Typhoon back. “But with the evening’s shocks, she’s emotionally ill-equipped to deal with this new information.”

“Who are you to decide that?”

“Would you rather have her lose control and burst the building’s water pipes?”

“She wouldn’t do that.”

“You can’t guarantee that.”

And she couldn’t.

Spark said, “We can put her in one of the guest rooms until she wakes up.”

“She’s going to be pissed off,” Celia said.

Olympus crossed his arms. “This wasn’t her fault. They can’t pin this on her.”

Arthur said, “Technically, it was. Maybe not murder, but they’ll want to charge her with manslaughter, maybe negligent homicide.”

“This was rigged. This is exactly the kind of bad press Paulson wants to pin on us to get us out of the way,” the Captain said.



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