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All Celia, Suzanne, and Arthur could do for the moment was watch the jerky, static-laden images from the news cameras, listen to the sensationalist commentary—talk of the superhumans gone rogue, of a new criminal mastermind taking over—and listen for the latest reports on the police radio.

Then Captain Olympus buzzed the Olympiad’s emergency line. The flashing red light made them all flinch; Spark pounded the button to reply.

“Yes, Captain, we’re here,” she said to the speaker.

“We’re coming up from the garage. We have injured.” He cut off the line.

Without comment, Spark ran to the back of the room and the elevator that led straight to the subterranean passage, where the Olympiad gained access to its hangar and vehicles. Arthur, more calmly, went to a supply locker hidden behind a secret panel that lay flush with the slick wall and removed a first-aid kit.

Celia waited by the table. She’d only get in the way if she tried to help. The injury couldn’t be serious—a graze, a twisted arm. There was only so much they could do with a first-aid kit. She liked to think if the injury were serious, her father would swallow his pride and go to the hospital. Take Robbie to the hospital—no way was Warren the injured party.

The elevator door hissed open. Captain Olympus exited first, assisting someone, a woman, her arm over his shoulder. Spark went to her other side to help, bringing her into the light. It was Typhoon, her blue suit damp and shining with water—and blood. The Bullet followed them to the table.

Typhoon was walking under her own power. She just seemed weak. Her taut jaw made her face, or what was visible of it, a picture of grim forbearance.

Stunned, Celia pulled a chair out from the table and offered it to her.

She’d keep her mouth shut. Until Analise said something, she’d keep her mouth entirely shut. She stepped out of the way as her parents helped the young woman into the chair. Then, the bloody gash in her shoulder became visible. It had been bound with a strip of cloth. The wound had mostly clotted, but rivers of blood streaked Typhoon’s arm. Not life-threatening, but the shock and blood loss were probably telling on her. She kept shaking her head.

Celia caught Arthur’s gaze. Don’t tell, she thought at him. Don’t tell them who she is.

He nodded.

“A shot grazed her,” Olympus said. “I thought it best to get her to safety.”

“I feel so stupid,” Typhoon muttered. “They started shooting at me and I just lost it. I never lose it like that when the bad guys are shooting.”

Spark said, “It’s because you know you’re better than the bad guys. The police confused you; they’re supposed to be good guys.”

“They still are,” Arthur said. He knelt by her and got to work, peeling off the makeshift bandage and dabbing at the wound with a gauze pad. “They believe they’re following orders and protecting the city, just as we are. Best not forget that. We’re all being played, I fear.”

“By the Destructor?” Typhoon said. “It’s his style.”

“That remains to be seen.”

“You didn’t have to do this. I’d have made it out on my own.” She tried standing, as if she really were well enough to walk out of there.

Olympus put his hand on her shoulder and held her in place. No one could argue with that grip, and Typhoon didn’t have a body of water nearby to help her. “You’re staying.”

“I’m not taking my mask off.”

“No one told you to,” Olympus said.

Typhoon … Analise—Celia was getting confused—caught her eye and glared briefly. Keep quiet.

So be it.

Celia leaned against the table and watched the news broadcasts. The police had issued a warrant for Typhoon’s arrest. The bulletin warned the public that she was dangerous. Not armed and dangerous, Celia noticed.

On one station, helicopters panned searchlights over Pierson Street. Rivers of water ran along gutters to pour back into the harbor. That wave must have been incredible, a wall of water as tall as the buildings sweeping down the street. Red and blue police lights flashed off glistening brick and concrete. Dozens of cops scouted the area; out on the water, divers searched from a police boat. They wouldn’t stop until they’d found the two missing officers. Their condition would determine which way this whole business swung.

She turned off the mute key on another monitor, showing a different news station. A woman anchor intoned, “… have word that another of the city’s superhuman vigilantes has broken the mayor’s curfew. This is an exclusive report. Gina, what do you have for us?”

The scene switched to the jerky video from a news helicopter—and why the hell weren’t the reporters being hauled in for breaking curfew?—and the rough sound feed filled with background noise.

“Thank you, Paula. Reports say that Breezeway has been sighted in the lower downtown area. A police helicopter has been dispatched. Now, we’ve been ordered to stay out of the area, but our cameraman thinks we have a good chance of spotting something if we— Hold on. Wait a minute. Yes, there. Can you see that?”

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В заросшем парке... Стоит его новый дом. Требует ремонта. Но охрана, вроде бы на уровне. Вот смотрит на свое новое имение Максим Белозёров и не нарадуется! Красота! Главное теперь, ремонт бы пережить и не обанкротиться. Может получиться у вдовствующей баронессы скидку выбить? А тут еще в городе аномалий Новосибирске, каждый второй хочет прикончить скромного личного дворянина Максима Белозёрова. Ну это ничего, это ладно - больше врагов, больше трофеев. Гораздо страшнее материальных врагов - враг бесплотный но всеобъемлющий. Страшный монстр - бюрократия. Грёбанная бюрократия! Становись бароном, говорят чиновники! А то плохо тебе будет, жалкий личный дворянин... Ну-ну, посмотрим еще, кто будет страдать последним. Хотя, "барон Белозеров"? Вроде звучит. А ведь барону нужна еще и гвардия. И больше верных людей. И больше земли. И вообще: Нужно больше золота.

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Фантастика / Городское фэнтези / Попаданцы / Аниме