The
Amazing Adventures of
D-DAY
and the
MIGHTY JANE!
?005 The Angst Guy
(theangstguy@yahoo.com)
Feedback (good, bad, indifferent,
just want to bother me, whatever) is appreciated. Please write to:
theangstguy@yahoo.com
Synopsis: The unstoppable D-Day
Morgendorffer and The Mighty Jane Lane face their greatest challenge yet in
this alternate-universe tale of superheroes, supervillains, cliffhangers, and sudden
death!
Author抯
Notes: Many
of this story抯 roots began in online discussions of whether any characters on Daria were actually evil. Some
characters who appeared briefly in the series had a pronounced nasty streak
(e.g., conceited jerk Tommy Sherman, junior animal torturer Brian Taylor, the pedophile
teacher of 揕ucky Strike,?etc.), while others could be unpleasant but weren抰
obviously wicked (e.g., Sandi Griffin and her mother). A few are borderline
(e.g., principal Angela Li). I made notes on these discussions and saved some
of the message-board threads for later study.
牋牋牋牋牋?Other fanfic authors have written
excellent crossovers and parodies depicting some of the Daria cast as superheroes, and the idea that intrigued me. And then
there were the official alter-ego pictures of Daria and company, many in
superhero garb or something akin to it. Daria抯 alter-ego in motorcycle
leathers and Jane in a spacesuit really locked it in. It all added up to the
following story, sparked by an Iron Chef challenge from Mahna Mahna on PPMB,
for a tale making use of certain movie clich閟.
Acknowledgements: Mahna Mahna has my profound
gratitude for her Iron Chef competition that sparked this story, though I am
not sure if the final version of the tale adhered to the actual rules of the
contest. Kristen Bealer nudged me to complete the story (and others) when I was
being pulled otherwise, and I am grateful for her pitchfork.
*
Episode 513, Part One:
APOCALYPSE, HERE AND NOW!
Or, Once Upon a Time, in an Alternate Universe Far, Far Away . . .
牋牋牋牋牋?As the warning klaxons went off in
his ears and the steel floor of the hijacked Air Force C-5X Galaxy tilted
forward under his feet, Ken 揟he Professor?Edwards (Language Arts, Creative
Writing, Ransom Notes, Socially Repulsive Erotic Literature) grabbed for the
netting on the side of the cargo bay with clammy hands and hoped the contents
of his stomach would remain hidden during what was promising to be a supremely
turbulent series of maneuvers. His tie was coming undone, his shirt was getting
badly wrinkled, and his deodorant had long ago failed.
牋牋牋牋牋?揝抦atter, P抐essor??shouted camouflage-clad General Buck 揃lood-n-Guts?Conroy from across the cargo bay. 揟his little roller coaster churnin?up the milk in your veins??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑抦 perfectly fine!?Ken shouted
back. 揥e academics have nerves of?i>uurp!?He clenched his teeth and
fought back dinner as the monstrous Galaxy lurched hard to starboard.
牋牋牋牋牋?Conroy roared with laughter as he
hung from the netting with one hand, enjoying the ride. He despised most of the
losers and goons that Chairman Li hired for this suicide mission, but Ken the
Cradle Robber was the worst of a very bad lot. When Ken wasn抰 playing the
prima donna over his supposed criminal genius, he was surfing the Internet for
kiddy porn and lecturing one and all about his favorite novel, Lolita.
Perhaps 揟he Professor?could be encouraged to take a short walk among the
clouds once the cargo bay doors opened梬ithout his parachute, of course.
General Conroy smiled. It would cap the end of a near-perfect day. The running
gun battle at Dover Air Force base had been a particular thrill.
牋牋牋牋牋?揅ommunications here!?came Linda 揂nchor Babe?Griffin抯 husky voice over the aircraft抯 intercom. 揟arget sighted! Capture in ninety seconds!!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Steel-plated news-bitch, Ken
thought over his nausea. Think you抮e everything with your dyed hair and
Botox injections, but you haven抰 been a real TV anchor-babe for over twenty
years. You抮e a washed-up marketing hag who couldn抰 dig gold out of a tooth,
and your control-freak daughter抯 well on her way to being your carbon copy. I
prefer my women a bit less . . . experienced. I should find out more about that
delightful Tricia Gupty when we抮e back on solid ground, unless the prize we抮e
about to take proves much more interesting. He shook his head with regret. If
only I could have had Tiffany in her prime. . . .
牋牋牋牋牋?揅apture in sixty seconds!?came Griffin抯 static-distorted voice. 揅argo-bay doors opening! Capture maneuvers starting in ten seconds!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揌ang on!?roared burly Big Jim,
Conroy抯 top sergeant and owner of a paintball field where Conroy抯 Merc Jerks
had trained in secret for this mission. Near panic, Ken looked back in the dim
electric lights of the bay, hearing the rumble of machinery. A thundering roar
of wind mounted from the rear of the bay as the massive twin doors of the
modified aircraft separated and pulled apart, revealing a beautiful western
sunset and Virginia抯 Atlantic coastline over two miles below.
牋牋牋牋牋?The aircraft dived again, and everyone in the cargo bay went weightless. 揧owza!?cried the red-haired Charles 揢pchuck?Ruttheimer III in delight. Smutty but clever, Upchuck wore the silver-skull lapel pin of the Junior Division of the Lawndale United Command for the Implacable Furtherance of Evil and Repression, whose unavoidable but strangely satisfying acronym was never spoken aloud. He started the midair recovery system without delay. With a clanking roar, long collapsible poles were extended downward out of the bay, the poles pulling apart to form a wide upside-down V-shape with a heavy cable strung between their tips. 揂h, the ultimate way to capture a woman抯 heart梐nd all the rest of her as well!?Upchuck said with a leer of anticipation. ?i>Rrrrowrrr!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揜adar contacts!?Griffin shouted on the intercom. 揊ighters have been scrambled from Andrews, Langley, Dover, and two Air National Guard bases! Fifteen minutes until first-wave interception, nuclear decoy missiles on standby! Capture in thirty seconds!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揕ooks like we got ourselves some company coming now!?said Big Jim with a ferocious grin. 揝omebody in the White House musta figured out they were short a family member!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揜emember, the President抯 daughter
is to be placed in my care once she抯 aboard!?shouted Ken.
牋牋牋牋牋?揢nless she抎 prefer someone younger
and more, shall we say, energetic,?Upchuck added, wiggling his eyebrows. Ken
glared at him, but Upchuck梬ho planned to take over Chairman Li抯 position one
day and had already planned out Ken Edwards抯 untimely demise, was unfazed.
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o need t?fight, boys,?growled the pinstripe-wearing organized crime lord known only as Bruno. 揇ere抣l be plenty t?go 憆ound when da ransom comes. My cut should make up for alla time I was a guest of da feds, unable t?see my sweet Rita. Speakin?o?which棓 He turned to his corrupt corporate lawyer, waiting for orders at his side 摋tanks fer springin?me from da pen on dat technicality, Eric.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o problem, Mister Bruno!?said Eric Schrecter. He reached into his suit jacket pocket. 揅are for a Cuban cigar??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揌ey, don?mind if I do,?said Bruno, taking the cigar. 揟anks again. Chairman Li put t抔edda some good muscle, eh? We got us a good squad o?guys, ya know dat??br> 牋牋牋牋牋?揌ell, yeah, I抦 good! Tommy Sherman rules, man!?Ex-football star Tommy Sherman, clad in dirty jeans, old sneakers, and a Lawndale High School tank top, pumped his fist in the air. 揟here抯 nothing that can stop the Sherman Tank!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揝herman, I抦 giving you a spot promotion to class-two private,?said the general solemnly. 揟he way you charged through those MPs at the Air Force base was incredible梐nd you didn抰 even flinch when you hit that concrete wall behind them. You抮e the best recruit for the Merc Jerks we抳e ever had.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?搼Course I am,?said Tommy grandly, 搼Cause
Tommy Sherman doesn抰 do nothing halfway! Like that time I ran the final
touchdown when Lawndale was down by five in the fourth quarter against Oakwood,
and I was facing the whole Oakwood lineup when suddenly棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揘eanderthal,?Ken muttered as Tommy
droned on梑ut he said it only to himself. He抎 gotten too many wedgies and
Dutch rubs from the muscle-bound thug whose glory days as a high-school
football star had left him with a broken nose and a moderate amount of brain
damage. And Chairman Li抯 biochemical-induced enhancements of Sherman抯 natural
gifts had made him a truly fearsome super-foe. Faking Tommy抯 death to the
public had been child抯 play for someone of Li抯 administrative talents,
allowing her to secretly bio-engineer the big lug to her heart抯 content. Ken
sighed in disgust. If only the moronic Sherman Tank had been worth the trouble.
Why, he抎 probably never even heard of Lolita.
牋牋牋牋牋?揅apture in five seconds!?shouted Griffin over the loudspeakers. 揅losing . . . closing . . .?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?The metal poles jerked backward. A
loud, repeated snapping noise came from below, outside the aircraft. The Galaxy抯
flight path leveled off and became blessedly steady.
牋牋牋牋牋?揅apture!?Griffin screamed in triumph. 揥e have the balloon and its high-value cargo! Congratulations to the pilot and crew for a perfect catch, and congratulations most of all to our very own Chairman Li!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I抣l make you my perfect
catch, General Conroy promised as he listened to Linda抯 voice. Once we
bail out with the raft and ditch this jumbo jet in the Atlantic, you and I will
do a little private celebrating while we wait for the submarine to pick us up.
Maybe that cute brunette we have for a pilot will join us, and we抣l go fishing
afterward and use the Professor for shark bait梠ne limb at a time.
牋牋牋牋牋?揂llow me to escort the young
lady in!?said Upchuck, reversing the recovery system controls. The poles
pulled up, collapsing back into their pre-capture positions as they hauled the
captured object with them. Merc Jerks cut away the weather balloon, throwing it
out the cargo-bay doors, and carried the box toward the middle of the cargo
deck. The double doors closed behind them, cutting down the wind and noise in
the bay.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇amn shame about those boys on the
ground,?said General Conroy. He pulled a victory cigar from his fatigue shirt
pocket, bit off the tip, and spat it in Ken抯 general direction. The cigar tip
missed and stuck to Dr. Margaret 揚sycho?Manson抯 gray tweed skirt. Frowning,
she reached down and snapped the errand bit away with a fingertip. She then
straightened and regarded the General with an arctic gaze.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇amn shame they had to be boys!?screeched Janet 撥ber-Woman?Barch as she sharpened her well-used bull-castrating knife. 揕osing men is no loss to me.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揌ey, whaddya mean, General??asked Tommy with a frown. 揥hat抯 the shame??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揥ell, son,?said the General, shaking out his match and tossing away, 揅hairman Li抯 temps did a fine job, kidnapping the President抯 daughter and sticking her in that little box and sending her up to us in that balloon and all, but the reward they were promised . . . well, they might choke on it.?Bruno the gangster, Upchuck, Barch, and several others burst into laughter. Ignoring them, the General drew deeply on his cigar and blew out a ring of smoke. 揟hat suitcase they thought was full of money, which they probably opened right after they sent up the kid, that kinda got mixed up with a suitcase full of cyanide gas containers. Damn shame about that. On the good side, they won抰 squeal to the feds about where the kid went, and the temp agency will get a little kickback to keep it on our side.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Ken paid no attention. He was already at the casket抯 side, unlocking the multitude of latches. 揝he抣l be frightened, of course, and possibly disoriented,?he said as he worked. 揑t will take someone with worldly experience, someone with the wisdom and confidence born of a lifetime of academia, to help her through the first few days in our care. As it happens, only I among all those present have those qualifications.?He undid the last latch as a large number of Merc Jerks crowded around, eager for their first view of the President抯 daughter. Ken lifted the container抯 heavy lid. 揧ou are in the safest of hands, my dear little . . .?His words caught in his throat as the lid came fully open. ? . . D-Day??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?In ash-gray motorcycle leathers, long brown ponytail, and owl-eye glasses, D-Day Morgendorffer sat up in the coffin on one elbow and tossed a red, round object at Ken, which he caught by reflex. 揝peaking of safe hands, hold that for me, would you??she asked梐nd fell back, slamming the container抯 lid shut as she did.
牋牋牋牋牋??span style='mso-bidi-font-style:
italic'>GRENADE!?screamed several Merc Jerks at the same time.
牋牋牋牋牋?As everyone fought to get out of the way, it occurred to Ken 揟he Professor?Edwards that he should get rid of the ticking red ball with 揟hat抯 All, Folks!?written on it in script next to a multitude of little skull-and-crossbones markings, the red ball he held in his hands only a foot and a half from his face, before the damned thing expl?o:p>
Episode 513, Part Two:
D-DAY HITS THE BEACH!
Or, Things Get Complicated and a Little Messy
牋牋牋牋牋?General 揃lood-n-Guts?Conroy turned
when he heard the cry grenade!梐nd saw a white flash six feet across,
brighter than the sun in the Galaxy抯 dark cargo hold. Caught in its glare were
Merc Jerks diving for cover, and that pervert Edwards?body, spinning through
the air like a scarecrow in a Kansas tornado.
牋牋牋牋牋?This is gonna hurt, Buck
thought, a split second before he was swept up by the thunderclap, louder than
a tank cannon fired next to his ear. The blast wave slammed him into a tall wooden
crate that had been twenty feet behind him only a moment before. Luckily, the
General had survived near-hits from badly aimed artillery on mercenary missions
in almost every country on Earth. Reflexes took over as he got to his feet,
ears ringing and the afterimage of the triple-strength flash-bang grenade
imprinted on his retinas. He stumbled over a submachine gun on the floor and
snatched it up with numb fingers, then groggily charged in the direction the
grenade had gone off. The route was littered with the groaning bodies of his
Merc Jerks and Li抯 motley L.U.C.I.F.E.R. agents. Of Ken Edwards, nothing could
be seen. No loss.
牋牋牋牋牋?揋et up, you bastards!?he yelled, kicking his men as he ran. 揑t was just a damn concussion bomb! Get up and fight like men!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揝exist hog!?shrieked 撥ber-Woman?Barch, jamming a long ammo clip into her AK-47 from her hiding place behind a debris-covered crate. 揑f those men were women, we wouldn抰 have this problem!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟ake your radical feminist agenda and shove it!?the General shouted back. 揥here抯 the enemy??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Barch gave him a nasty grin and pointed. 揇-Day抯 in the crate we hauled in, right over there!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Buck felt the chilly finger of fear run down his spine. D-Day Morgendorffer? The D-Day, here inside this plane, with me? Jesus Harley Davidson Christ! He turned and saw the closed coffin-like container, the balloon line still attached. His brow darkened as his nerve returned. 揟here抯 only one of her and a planeload of us!?he roared. ?i style='mso-bidi-font-style:normal'>Charge, men!?With that he ran forward alone, submachine gun blazing. Armor-piercing rounds riddled the long container, punching through the metal skin and splintering the crates behind it. When General Conroy reached the container, he shot off the latches and kicked the lid open, then raised his weapon for the final killing spray of bullets?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?梑ut the coffin-like box was empty
except for torn strips of heavy-duty shockproof padding that had lined the
inside.
牋牋牋牋牋?His submachine gun wavered. 揥hat
the棓 he gasped, eyes wide.
牋牋牋牋牋?揂w, no present from Santa??asked a
deadpan voice. He looked up.
牋牋牋牋牋?Rising just above a pile of
unconscious bodies on the cargo-bay deck, five-foot-two D-Day Morgendorffer
fired a pistol right at Buck抯 face. A projectile with wires trailing behind it
struck him in the forehead. He staggered back from the blinding impact梐nd then
seventy-five thousand volts came through the wires. He hit the floor like a wet
sandbag.
牋牋牋牋牋?揝hocking,?said D-Day to the
twitching body of the mercenary commander. She tossed the stun gun aside and
scurried for cover.
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hat the hell抯 going on down there??came Linda Griffin抯 voice over the intercom. 揥hat was that noise??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揂h, everything is under control!?cried D-Day, spotting the intercom nearby. 揝ituation normal!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hat was that explosion??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day kicked a Merc Jerk in the groin with a steel-toed boot, shoved him into a maintenance locker, then shut and locked it. 揥e had a slight weapons malfunction, but everything抯 perfectly all right now!?she called back. She karate-chopped a mercenary who was getting to his feet, knocking him back down. 揥e抮e all fine here, just fine! How are you??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揌ow am I? Get General Conroy and put him on the line!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Big Jim, his camouflage fatigues
torn to shreds by the flash-bang grenade, tried to grab D-Day in a chokehold.
She twisted out of his grasp, kneed him, then judo-flipped him flat on his back
on the metal floor. 揂h, negative!?she shouted, kicking Big Jim in the noggin
for good measure. 揥e抳e had a large reactor leak here, very large and
dangerous! Give us a few minutes to shut it down before棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揥e don抰 have a reactor on this aircraft! Who is this??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day sighed as she found several .45 Colt pistols and snatched up ammo clips for them. 揑抦 either animal, vegetable, or mineral,?she said, dodging a thrown crowbar. 揧ou have nineteen questions left.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Anchor Babe抯 gasp echoed throughout the cargo bay. ?i>D-Day??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揜ats, you win,?said D-Day, and shot the intercom to pieces. 揑 forgot the rest of the script for that movie, anyway.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 admire your style, D-Day!?cried Barch, firing a rapid series of bursts from her AK-47 in the direction D-Day had fled. 揅an I call you Daria, just between us girls? My offer for you to be my assistant still stands, if you want to join our side! Chairman Li has a very generous medical and dental plan, and there抯 talk of a 401K starting next month!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揅all me what you like,?said D-Day, firing back from behind a crate with the .45 Colts. 揌owever, I believe Lawndale High has strict rules prohibiting fraternization between teachers and students. I抎 hate to get on the Chairman抯梕xcuse me, Principal Li抯 bad side.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揂ngela would make an exception in your case, I抦 sure! And she could even get you vision insurance!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day stopped firing. 揤ision? New frames for free??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Barch stopped firing as well. 揧es!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揕enses??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揙nce a year, free!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揜egular checkups??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟en-dollar copay only!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揅ontacts??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揧es, yes, yes! Absolutely!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟oo bad,?said D-Day. 揑 can抰 wear
contacts.?She fired until both pistols were empty, keeping Barch pinned down,
then pulled a pink canister from her belt and threw it. The canister fell
behind 躡er-Woman and began spraying a lavender mist in all directions.
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o!?Barch screamed, dropping her
weapon to cover her face. 揅hanel抯 Forbidden Fragrance, Number Thirteen! I抦
allergic to it! My eyes! I can抰 see! Oxygen! Augh!?Unable to speak from coughing, she curled into a convulsing
ball next to a group of gasping Merc Jerks who, too, were overcome by the
suffocating perfume.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇aria, are you there??came a voice
in D-Day抯 left ear, faint against the roaring wind in the background.
牋牋牋牋牋?揋lad to hear you抮e awake,?said D-Day, pressing on the implanted microphone in her ear as she scurried for new cover. Bullets ricocheted from walls and floor around her梩he Merc Jerks and their allies were recovering from the flash-bang. 揑 could use a little extracurricular help, whenever you want to wander over.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揙n the way,?said The Mighty Jane in a cheery voice. 揑 had to save Norfolk, Virginia, first. One of Chairman Li抯 goons fired a conventional-warhead drone at the city as a diversion, but I jammed its guidance and sent it down into the Little Pond. Piece of cake. Speaking of cake, when are we going out for pizza next??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揕et抯 talk food later, okay??D-Day ducked as a machinegun stitched a row of holes into another wall of crates. 揇id you get the President抯 daughter back to the Secret Service??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揜oger that. How抎 you catch up with the body snatchers??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day threw a hypersonic proximity grenade at the machine gunner. An ear-splitting BOOM! went through the cargo bay梐nd Bruno the crime lord and his cigar went to dreamland. 揕i抯 hired temps opened that cyanide suitcase before they sent the balloon up,?she said. 揋reed really is one of the deadly sins. I had just enough time to get the kid out, give her the beacon to guide you in, then get in the balloon box and go. Everyone from L.U.C.I.F.E.R. must be here梕veryone but the Chairman, of course.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揙f course. Oh棓 The Mighty Jane hesitated, her voice uncertain 摋I meant to tell you, Tom called. Tom Sloane, I mean. He抯 running late.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋??i>Damn it! Not the I抦-at-the-Cove-with-the-family excuse again!?Two Merc Jerks charged D-Day with commando knives, but she jumped and power-kicked each in the face at the same moment, getting only a scratch as she landed, rolled, and kept running so she wouldn抰 be a standing target. 揋uess we抣l do without him, then.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?搼Fraid so, but he promised he抎 make up for it.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揧eah, sure, whatever.?D-Day didn抰
know if she bought Tom抯 excuse that he was being mind-controlled by Chairman
Li抯 Atomic Neuro-Satellite when he kissed her while he was still dating Jane,
but that was water over the dam now. So, is he going to go out with Jane or
me? she wondered, then raged, Damn me for even thinking about this right
now! Jane and I were the perfect team until Tom screwed everything up! Damn it,
damn it, damn it! Anxiety gripped her again. Would the bonds uniting
the Freakin?Friends be broken forever梠ver a guy?! It was worse than
pathetic. It was flat-out stupid. 揂nyway, see you soon, Jane,?she said,
trying to sound like her old self.
牋牋牋牋牋?The Mighty Jane sounded as if she had no such worries. 揘o problemo, amiga. My E.T.A. is two minutes.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟hat抯 . . . uh-oh.?D-Day skidded to a stop as she started to run behind a row of boxes. She backpedaled rapidly. 揓ane, can you cut that E.T.A. to half a minute??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟rouble? More than the usual, I mean??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?It was hard for D-Day to talk with her throat so dry from fear. She kept backing up. 揕ooks like those rumors the CIA picked up about a Sherman Tank were true.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hat? Tommy Sherman? No way! He抯 dead!?A pause, then: 揑sn抰 he??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Someone chuckled in a deep, stuffed-up-nose voice. 揥ell, if it ain抰 the Misery Chick.?Tommy Sherman came out from behind the boxes, knocking many of them over when he brushed against them. He then kicked a 300-pound generator across the cargo bay梐nd didn抰 flinch. 揃abe, looks like this is your lucky day.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane抯 voice was hard. 揌eard it, amiga. Afterburners on. Jane out.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揗isery Chick,?said Tommy, 搕oday you get to meet Superman梐nd the real thing, too.?He picked up the bodies of two unconscious mercenaries and flung them aside as if they抎 been dolls stuffed with cotton. 揂nd that Superman,?he finished, looking down at her as he advanced, 搃s me.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揂ren抰 you supposed to have a red
towel on your back and fuzzy blue long johns??said D-Day. She sensed someone
behind her and dodged to the left. A steel pipe flashed through the air where
she had been. She caught the pipe, turning it as she lunged in on Upchuck, and
banging him hard across the back of the skull with the pipe抯 end. He staggered
but didn抰 drop right away, so she grabbed his arm, twisted it to make him move
in the direction she wanted, and flung him at the charging Sherman Tank, who
was almost on her.
牋牋牋牋牋?Tommy backhanded Upchuck and sent
the youth flying. He threw himself at D-Day, reaching for her throat, but she
hand-sprang over a crate to land on a hiding Merc Jerk, knocking him flat. She
snatched his assault rifle, flipped it to full auto, then jumped to the left by
instinct. The Sherman Tank hit the crate and knocked it into the side of the
cargo bay, missing his chance to flatten D-Day. The unconscious Merc Jerk was
far less fortunate. Only his left boot stuck out from where the crate and wall
became one.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day rolled, took a prone firing
position, and squeezed the trigger, holding it down as she kept the barrel
aimed right at Tommy Sherman抯 chest. She knew as she did that she抎 broken the
one central rule for all superheroes: Don抰 try to kill your opponent; take
your foe alive to face justice. However, if the rumors were true about
Tommy and his potential for violent and unstoppable super-crime, killing him
here might not be the worst thing she could do. In the wild muzzle flashes and
jerking of the weapon, D-Day could barely make out her target. The clip gave
out after thirty rounds . . .
牋牋牋牋牋?. . . and Tommy Sherman was still on
his feet. He抎 staggered back a few steps, but he was completely unharmed,
except for his torn shirt. Tommy抯 craggy face darkened as he looked at the
under-tall heroine. His eyes seemed to glow red.
牋牋牋牋牋?揗isery Chick,?growled the Sherman Tank, 搉ow you抳e gone and pissed me off but good.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o chance that we can forget this
and be friends??Though she kept her tone light, D-Day wasn抰 sure if she was
really kidding. She prepared to spring to her feet and flee. If he caught her,
he抎 mash her up like Silly Putty.
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o chance . . . Quinn抯 cousin, or
whatever,?said a haughty, rather nasal voice behind her.
牋牋牋牋牋?Still lying on her stomach, D-Day carefully put down the empty assault weapon. She did not dare turn her head away from the Sherman Tank. 揝andi Griffin??she said. 揑s the rest of the Fantastic Club here, too??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑t would seem not,?said the voice dryly. 揑n fact, I doubt those fashion-fixated morons have any idea where I am. They抎 certainly never believe I was here.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day nodded, still watching Tommy
Sherman梬ho was smiling at someone standing behind D-Day. 揧ou抮e not here to
help me out by any chance, are you??D-Day asked, her voice rising.
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o,?said the voice. 揅hairman Li made me an offer I couldn抰 refuse. And if you make any sudden moves, I抣l pull the trigger on this grenade launcher, put a high-explosive shell right between your shoulder blades, and make my mother and the Chairman very proud of me.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?After an appropriate silence, D-Day cleared her throat. 揥ouldn抰 want to disappoint Mother, would we??/p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o, we wouldn抰. Oh, Tommy??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揧eah??asked the Sherman Tank.
牋牋牋牋牋?Without turning her head, D-Day could almost see Sandi Griffin抯 perfect smile. 揝he抯 yours.?/span>
Episode 513, Part Three:
DEATH, BE NOT PROUD!
Or, No One Lives Forever桬specially Not a Hero
牋牋牋牋牋?Ken 揟he Professor?Edwards, the
substitute teacher with a gift for writing and a streak of pedophilia, was
having difficulty getting around. He vaguely remembered opening a box that had
exploded, but nothing after that. Now, he did not know where he was, his body
was battered and aching, and his face and arms were burned as raw. Worse, he
was blind and deaf, though he hoped it was temporary. For now, he could only
crawl on his knees and hope for rescue from this nightmare.
牋牋牋牋牋?After a terrible age of time, he
sensed vibrations in the metal floor. Two people were passing nearby. He waved
his arms and emitted guttural cries, his mouth unable to shape words properly.
The vibrations stopped梩hen approached and stopped very close to him. Someone
touched Ken on the left shoulder. He turned his head in the direction he
thought his savior was standing. Help me, he tried to say.
牋牋牋牋牋?Without warning, a sharp pain stung deep into his left shoulder. He cried out and cowered. They stabbed me! They stabbed me! Who would do such a thing to me, of all people? Who would?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?He screamed. Molten lava raced through his bloodstream from the stab wound into every cell of his arm, down into his fingers, and up his shoulder into his chest. He screamed when the burning reached his lungs and speared every air sac. He tried to scream when the burning reached his heart, but a chest-crushing spasm choked off his cries. The burning came up through his neck and into his head, where it burst like a supernova. It was the purest pain in the cosmos, so great that it became holy and godlike. It burned up his thoughts, then burned the ashes, then the dust, and then?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?He did not feel the steel floor when
his head struck it.
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hoa!?said the small boy with big eyes, watching as The Professor抯 body twitched its last. 揟hat was cool!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?The tall woman in the white lab coat and gray tweed skirt allowed herself a smile as she tossed away the hypodermic and selected another from her black bag. 揗ister Edwards, though only superficially injured by the flash-bang grenade, was of no further use to our cause,?she said in an authoritative tone. She prepared the second needle. 揌is passing was quick, as intended梩hough likely not painless, given his reactions and the type of serpent venom used. The Indonesian fire cobra is widely feared for good reason, as you see. There are many types of snake venoms, each with its unique properties and uses. If you hope to be a professional interrogator, you must learn them all.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?The twelve-year-old boy looked up with awe at the tall, severe woman. 揑 want to do that, Doctor Manson. I want to be just like you!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Dr. Margaret 揚sycho?Manson was secretly pleased. She allowed herself to tousle the boy抯 long, blond hair for a moment. 揑抦 sure that you will be,?she said. Withdrawing her hand, she returned to her humorless manner. 揘ow, let us find D-Day Morgendorffer, and I will show you what the venom of the Amazonian green rotting viper does to its victims.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揙h, cool!?Brian Taylor cried梩hen eagerly added, 揇oes it work on pets, too??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Elsewhere in the Galaxy抯 cargo bay,
The Sherman Tank blinked in surprise, ignoring The Professor抯 fading screams. 揧ou抮e
giving D-Day Morgendorffer to me??Tommy Sherman asked the slim,
attractive, possibly underage brunette in the skin-tight purple bodysuit. He
found her grenade launcher amusing.
牋牋牋牋牋?揈xactly,?Sandi Griffin replied,
struggling to keep the cumbersome weapon level. She was nineteen but would have
been pleased to be mistaken for seventeen.
牋牋牋牋牋?Tommy laughed. 揟hat抯 funny!?he said. 揧ou抮e like claiming her, and now you抮e trying to give her to me? That抯 pretty good!?His humor faded. 揝he was mine before you got here, babe.?He squinted at Sandi and frowned. 揌ey, I saw you on TV once. You抮e some kind of hero or something. You got that 慒C?thing on your boob, so you抮e in the Fantastic Club, right??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Sandi gritted her teeth. 揌ow very astute of you. Yes, I am the president of the Fantastic Club, and that is our logo on my梠n my whatever. As it happens, though, I work for your side now. Chairman Li said she was proud that I met her extraordinarily high standards for membership in L.U.C.I.F.E.R.?She was careful to spell the acronym out, then she looked Tommy Sherman up and down. 揑t would appear, however, that her admission standards were quite low before now.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揧eah, till they got me,?Tommy
grunted. He shifted his gaze to the diminutive brunette in the dark-gray
leather motorcycle outfit, lying prone on the cargo-bay floor between himself
and the treasonous Sandi. From the floor, D-Day Morgendorffer watched Tommy
with grave concern through her still-undamaged glasses.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇-Day,?Tommy said in reflection. 揘ot
much for looks, but back-to-back keggers could fix that梠nly I don抰 wanna wait
that long for a waste of space like you. I抣l just waste your space now and get
it over with.?He swaggered closer, glancing up at Sandi. 揌ey,?he said, 搘hatever
your name is, you gotta be older than fourteen, right??His thick fingers
reached down for D-Day抯 long ponytail. 揗aybe me and you could go somewhere
when all this is over, get some brewskis, do a little weed, then get horizonta棓
牋牋牋牋牋?Sandi shot Tommy in the face with
the grenade launcher at point-blank range. The recoil from the weapon knocked
her backwards off her feet and flung the launcher to one side, but the
rocket-powered shaped-charge shell sledgehammered The Sherman Tank across the
cargo bay. He slammed spread-eagle into the opposite wall, then smacked against
the floor on his face, momentarily motionless.
牋牋牋牋牋?揙w, damn it!?yelled Sandi, sitting up on the floor and rubbing her bruised arms. 揟hat goddamn thing hurts!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Hardly able to believe her escape,
D-Day jumped to her feet and hauled Sandi up a moment later. 揜un now, talk
later!?she shouted, and the girls fled for another, hopefully safer part of
the cargo bay. Sandi coughed on the noxious air, thick with cloying perfume,
gunpowder fumes, and smoke from small fires burning here and there.
牋牋牋牋牋?揊irst of all, thank you,?D-Day said as she guided the leader of the Fantastic Club to a spot behind a pile of smoldering duffle bags. 揝econd, care to tell me what you抮e doing up here instead of playing with the Powerpuff Girls back in Lawndale??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揙h, like I really want to be here!?Sandi snapped. 揑 thought a brain like you could tell that I was on a secret mission! Chairman Li put an anti-muta-something in the school cafeteria抯 raspberry vinaigrette, and everyone in the Fantastic Club lost her mutant powers! I抦 almost freaking mundane!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟here are worse things,?said
D-Day, irked. 揑抦 a mundane, technically speaking, though performing at peak
Olympic mental and physical棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揙h, stop being such a Captain
America! You抳e got to help us! Your cousin棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揝ister! She抯 my sister! Just say it!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hat-ever! Quinn抯 pyro-mutations can抰 even light a match, Tiffany can抰 generate enough water to wet a tissue, Stacy is hyperventilating because she can抰 keep the wind from ruining her hairdo?i>and I don抰 have my super-hard, silky-smooth, ultra-dense skin! This really sucks!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hy don抰 you yell about it a little louder and tell everyone where we are??D-Day shot back. 揂nd how did you manage to get up here with the rest of the Beautiful People, anyway??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揅hairman Li told me she抎 give me a serum that would restore my super-powers and give me permanently tanned skin if I joined her side! All I had to do was get on this plane at Dover and kill any super-hero who tried to stop her plans!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day looked Sandi in the eyes. 揟hat
would be me,?she said carefully.
牋牋牋牋牋?揥ell, duh!?hissed Sandi. 揂nd do you feel dead? No? Then I put one over on Chairman Li, didn抰 I? And I used my super-name and not my real name when I signed my application paperwork, so it doesn抰 count anyway. Just get over it and help me trash this place and find the anti-anti-muta-something serum that will get my superpowers back! And those of the rest of the Fantastic Club, of course.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揅haritable of you,?said D-Day with
narrow eyes. Something about Sandi抯 story didn抰 ring true. Sandi was her
usual snotty self, and she was such a lousy actress she had to be authentic.
However, it wasn抰 like Chairman Li to let a hero convert to evil without some
sort of insurance against the hero playing double agent. What was the catch,
then? It was also a surprise to see Sandi risk her life on so desperate a
mission with no super-powers to support her. Perhaps her fear of being forever
mundane drove her to such extremes. Sandi was courageous, but as self-centered
as ever, D-Day concluded. A pity. Sandi had so much potential.
牋牋牋牋牋?No time left to worry about it. D-Day risked a look over the duffle-bag pile and spotted several Merc Jerks gathering about forty feet away behind a Humvee chained down to the cargo deck. The soldiers were heavily armed and taking orders from someone D-Day couldn抰 see. 揅ompany coming,?she said, ducking again. 揇ressed to kill, too.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 hate it when they don抰 phone ahead,?Sandi grumbled. 揑 could go back and get that gun-thingie I found梚f you抣l shoot it for me.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揕et抯 not disturb Sleeping Ugly,
please. Crap, my equipment belt is out of stink bombs and boomers. All I抳e got
left is Jane抯 Stik-Tite 9000 glue minigun. I could spray the floor and hope
they抎 fall in it, but棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揝peaking of which, where is that other girl you hang around with? Isn抰 she supposed to be here, too, or is this her day off??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day looked up with a glare. 揧ou know what her name is. Jane抯 on her way. It wouldn抰 hurt to show a little respect to others once in a while.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揙h, right, like you抮e really doing well here on your own. If I hadn抰 come in and kicked Bulldozer Brain抯 butt, you抎 look like scrambled eggs by now.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?There wasn抰 time to count to ten,
so D-Day counted to two and promised herself she抎 put instant hair remover in
Sandi抯 shampoo when they got home again. 揗aybe we can scrounge up a smoke
grenade or some tear gas,?she said. 揌ere, you look over that way, and I抣l棓
牋牋牋牋牋?Something crashed into the floor
between the girls. Before they could react, Tommy Sherman grabbed the girls by
their necks and lifted them off the ground, ignoring their shouts, shrieks, and
kicks. 揌ey, I move pretty quietly in these sneakers, don抰 I??he said with
pride. 揋ood trick with the popgun back there, chicky, but I got a better one.
I抦 gonna pick you both up by your feet, then smash you together and see whose
head is the first one to棓
牋牋牋牋牋?One of the two multiton rear doors
on the C-5X Galaxy was ripped shrieking from its steel hinges, then tossed
aside toward the ocean ten thousand feet below, admitting a hurricane blast
that howled throughout the cargo bay. An instant later, a blur of white and red
flashed inside, zeroed in on Tommy Sherman, and slammed into his chest at over
175 miles an hour. D-Day and Sandi fell to the floor like stringless puppets.
D-Day groaned and sat up, wiping tears of pain from her eyes to see the
white-and-red blur beating The Sherman Tank with merciless jackhammer fists. Though
initially stunned, The Sherman Tank was fighting back with increasing ferocity.
Maneuvering jets on the white-and-red blur kept it from being knocked away when
Tommy抯 punches hit home. Instead, the blur drove Tommy before it, toward the
forward bulkhead of the cargo bay.
牋牋牋牋牋?揓ane抯 here,?groaned D-Day to Sandi above the racket. 揥e抳e got to get out of this place before they tear apart the plane or squash us by accident.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 think my mom抯 in the crew cabin upstairs,?muttered Sandi, rubbing her neck with a grimace. 揑f I can pretend to still be working for Li, she might know where the Chairman keeps her anti-anti-whatever serum.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揝ee if she knows where the
parachutes are, too,?D-Day added.
牋牋牋牋牋?揙h, you won抰 need a parachute, my dears.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hat??said D-Day and Sandi at the
same time, looking at each other. They turned and looked behind them.
牋牋牋牋牋?Acting on pure reflex, D-Day threw
her arm upward and blocked Dr. Manson抯 downward stab. She then spotted the
hypodermic needle in Manson抯 fist梐nd the needle arcing around in her other
fist, too. Recoiling, she dodged the second attack by less than an inch, then
kicked upward twice into Manson抯 chest and heard ribs break. With a spinning
kick to Manson抯 jaw, she saw her foe fall梤ight on top of one of the
hypodermic needles.
牋牋牋牋牋?Marking the doctor as out of the
fight, D-Day turned to Sandi, who stood clutching her right hand in obvious
pain. At her feet was the most evil middle-schooler in the entire world, Brian
Taylor梠ut cold, with an electro-paralyzer fallen at his side.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 forgot I didn抰 have my rock-skin powers!?Sandi hissed through her teeth. 揑 punched him right in the forehead and almost broke my hand!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揧ou got the Hell Child before he got you,?said D-Day in surprise, looking Brian over. 揑 could almost admire you for that.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揇rop dead,?sneered Sandi, though with a hint of satisfaction in her voice. She spotted Dr. Manson, then walked over and shouted down at the body, 揂nd for your information, I do not have control issues, you . . . you sick-chiatrist!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揝omething from an inkblot test she
once gave you??asked D-Day.
牋牋牋牋牋?揙h, right, as if looking at cappuccino stains could tell anyone anything. Let抯 get out of here.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?The girls left the area to avoid being shot by the surviving Merc Jerks or crushed in the chaotic and ongoing battle between The Sherman Tank and the powered-armor fury of The Mighty Jane, who were smashing everything in sight. Before leaving, D-Day noticed that Dr. Manson抯 still-living body seemed to be rotting away from within梐 sight she did not wish to observe further. She spotted the open spiral staircase up to the flight deck and directed Sandi toward it. 揌ope you can convince your mom that you抮e on her side,?said D-Day. What a mess her family must be these days. 揥ant to pretend I抦 your prisoner to further the illusion??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o, she抎 never believe that,?said Sandi梬ith a trace of regret, D-Day thought. 揑抣l do this by myself.?Sandi swallowed, looking up the stairs. 揕isten, Quinn抯 cou梥ister . . . if things don抰 go well . . . I don抰 want you to laugh at me, but tell Quinn she was always my best friend, my best friend ever. I cared about her, even if . . . even if I didn抰 act like it. She was always . . . look, just tell her, okay??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day blinked. 揢h, sure. Good luck.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟hanks.?Sandi turned away and
started up the stairs. D-Day watched until Sandi was out of sight, then looked
around to see what challenges remained on the burning aircraft.
牋牋牋牋牋?揥ell, well, well,?said the
pigtailed brunette in the Lawndale gym-teacher抯 sweat suit. Behind her were a
dozen armed Merc Jerks, their automatic weapons pointed at D-Day抯 chest.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇on抰 tell me,?said D-Day in a deadpan. 揂s punishment, you want me to do fifty jumping jacks or two laps around the football field, right??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o,?said Ms. Morris, the girls?athletic coach for Lawndale High School. 揑 just want you to die.?She tossed
aside her razor-edged clipboard and took off her blue-and-yellow windbreaker,
revealing a yellow T-shirt below and perfectly toned muscles.
牋牋牋牋牋?揂 martial-arts one-on-one,?said D-Day in instant understanding. 揊e-mano on fe-mano.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟hat抯 it,?said Ms. Morris, taking off her sneakers to stand in her bare feet. She took the ready pose for the Thousand-Clawed Tiger fighting style, which was known to at most two people in the entire world, a master and a student. Chairman Li was the last known master. It figured. 揧ou win, you go free,?Morris said. 揑 win, I put your head in my trophy case at home.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揊air enough,?said D-Day, reaching
into a pocket in her leather bodysuit. She pulled out a small folded piece of
paper.
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o tricks!?growled Morris,
preparing to make the thirty-foot leap to kick D-Day抯 head from her shoulders.
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o tricks,?said D-Day, flipping the piece of paper like a discus. It landed by Morris抯 toes. 揑t抯 a note from Penny Lane. You might want to read it before we get started.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Ms. Morris抯 face changed as she
stared from the paper to D-Day and back. 揚-P-Penny??she gasped, her face
turning white.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑抎 hurry and read it before The Mighty Jane comes over,?said D-Day. 揝he still has a grudge about you trying to inject her with mutagenic steroids and force her to join the cross-country team.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Morris bent down and picked up the
paper. She unfolded it with trembling hands and read the words on it, her face
and eyes turning red as she did.
牋牋牋牋牋?揝he抯 waiting for me in Panama
City,?she said, her voice quavering. Tears ran down her cheeks as she looked
up at D-Day. 揝he桰梬e梚t was梬e couldn抰棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揝he left the country because she fell in love with you when she was a senior at Lawndale,?said D-Day in understanding. 揝he was too afraid of what everyone would say if they knew. You loved her, too, but couldn抰 do anything because she was your student. You both parted, heartbroken梑ut she抯 waiting for you, if you still want her.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 do!?said Morris, then put a hand over her mouth and shut her eyes tightly. After a moment, she regained her self-control, wiped her tears, and cleared her throat. 揕ooks like we抣l have to put this off until another time,?she said, straightening. She turned and waved at the Merc Jerks. 揝tand down!?she yelled. 揈veryone get a parachute and a life raft! We抮e going to Panama City!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Cheering, the Merc Jerks lowered
their weapons and immediately left. Morris gave D-Day a last look. 揟hank you,?she said.
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o problem,?said D-Day. 揘o hard
feelings about running all those punishment laps, either.?She paused, then
added, 揓ane, though, might be a little棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揜ight,?said Morris, and she ran
off to get a parachute.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day sighed. Hearing a noise behind
her, she turned梐nd saw Sandi Griffin coming back from the stairs. Sandi had a
strange look on her face and clutched something in her right hand.
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hat抯 up??said D-Day. Her gaze
dropped. Half-hidden by Sandi抯 right arm, a dark stain was spreading across
her fashionable purple uniform, just below her breastbone where a small hole
marred the fabric. Sandi began to fall, but D-Day lunged and caught her, then
eased her down to lie on the debris-covered deck.
牋牋牋牋牋?揟his棓 Sandi grimaced in pain 摋is for Quinn . . . and the others.?She pushed her fist toward D-Day. Her fingers opened. A small glass vial full of clear liquid was in her palm. 揟he serum . . .?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day took the vial and put it away without looking at it further. She then pulled a sterile gauze bandage from a side pocket and covered what looked like the entry wound from a bullet. Sandi gasped, and her fingers clutched at D-Day抯 dark leather suit. 揃e careful,?she whispered through her teeth. 揗y mom . . . has . . . a . . . g-g-g-?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揋un,?said a woman behind D-Day. It
sounded like Linda Griffin. D-Day did not turn around, continuing to try to
stop the bleeding, but the exit wound on Sandi抯 back was enormous and it
looked like an artery had been severed.
牋牋牋牋牋?揗om,?whispered Sandi, looking over D-Day抯 shoulder. 揗om . . . don抰 . . .?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟raitor,?Linda spat, the venom thick in her voice. 揧ou betrayed me. My own daughter.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揗om,?said Sandi. She shuddered. 揘o
. . . don抰 . . . it抯 wrong . . .?Her body stiffened . . .
牋牋牋牋牋?. . . and then relaxed. Her breath
came out as a long sigh. Her eyes remained open and fixed on a place in the air.
牋牋牋牋牋?揝andi??said D-Day softly. She raised her voice and leaned close. 揝andi??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揧ou抮e next, Daria,?said Linda. 揑抳e always hated that stupid name, 慏-Day.?It makes my super-name look pretty good.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day reached and gently closed Sandi抯 eyes with her hand. 揧ou killed her,?she said in shocked disbelief, still looking at Sandi. 揧ou killed your own child.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 did it for Chairman Li!?Linda shouted, her voice quavering and far too high. 揝he told me that if I killed anyone trying to steal the serum, she抎 make me her second in command! I抦 proud that I did it! The worthless little bitch was a traitor! A traitor to me! To hell with her!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Still kneeling, D-Day looked into
Linda抯 haunted eyes, not into the barrel of the silenced black pistol pointing
at D-Day抯 face.
牋牋牋牋牋?揧ou killed her,?D-Day whispered. 揑
can抰 believe it. Just like that, you棓
牋牋牋牋牋?Linda抯 face twisted. ?i>I know what I did, damn you!?she screamed. The black revolver trembled in her hands. Her trigger finger
tightened.
牋牋牋牋牋?The gunshot followed.
Episode 513, Part Four:
THE FINAL SMACKDOWN!
Or, Just When You Thought It Couldn抰 Get Any Worse Than This
牋牋牋牋牋?The gunshot came from above and to D-Day抯 left, not from
Linda Griffin抯 silenced weapon. However, what D-Day noticed first was that
when she heard the gunshot, the pistol in Linda 揂nchor Babe?Griffin抯 hands
vanished. So did her hands, which had been clamped around the pistol grip.
Clattering noises came from yards away to the right, where the weapon抯 remains
bounced off the cargo bay抯 floor and walls.
牋牋牋牋牋?Linda staggered back, then looked down with wide-eyed
horror at her arms, which ended messily at the wrists. Her mouth fell open to
scream.
牋牋牋牋牋?With the second gunshot, a spray of pink blew out from
the back of Linda Griffin抯 head, ruffling her brown hair and forming a mist
that settled over everything behind her and stained it red. A surprised look
came over Anchor Babe抯 face as she made a curious noise, like a gasp. She then
tilted to her left, her knees gave way, and she fell hard on her side, rolling
on her back with limbs askew. D-Day watched it happen in stunned silence, then
looked up.
牋牋牋牋牋?A slim woman wearing a USAF pilot抯 jumpsuit and carrying a quick-assemble sniper rifle ran down the spiral staircase from the crew level. She knelt when she got to D-Day, put the rifle aside, and took D-Day抯 face in her hands to examine her. 揂re you hurt??the woman asked quickly. She looked a bit like D-Day, though her pinned-up brunette hair was naturally wavy and she wore no glasses. 揟alk to me, Daria. Are you okay? Are you hurt??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑抦 fine,?whispered D-Day dully. She reached up and
pulled the older woman to her, burying her face in the woman抯 shoulder.
牋牋牋牋牋?揅ouldn抰 stand to see my favorite niece get hurt,?said the woman, hugging D-Day to her. She looked down at Sandi Griffin抯 body. 揙h, my God. Is that . . . that抯 her daughter? Sandi, from the Fantastic Club??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day nodded, then pulled away. Time to get up, she thought. I have to finish this thing. 揥e have to get out of here, Aunt Amy,?she said upon rising to her feet. 揓ane抯 fighting Tommy Sherman, but I think everyone else is either gone, dead, or out of action. How抎 you get mixed up in this??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟he Company wanted me to get in here as a mole,?said Special Agent Amy Barksdale, using the CIA抯 favorite pseudonym. 揥e got wind of Li抯 plot to kidnap the President抯 daughter. One of the Chairman抯 subordinates took me on as a pilot. I caught your balloon a little while ago.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟hanks,?said D-Day without emotion. She scanned the huge cargo bay, noting the torn-off door at the rear and several large holes in the fuselage in scattered places. 揓ane抯 nothing if not thorough. Doesn抰 look like she抯 here, though. Maybe she took the fight outside. I hope Tommy can抰 fly.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揝o, Tommy Sherman抯 alive??asked Amy. 揕i really made him super??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揕ast time I saw him, he almost tore my head off.?D-Day rubbed her sore neck, remembering, and looked down at Sandi抯 body. 揥e can抰 leave her here.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Amy glanced down, then at her niece. 揇aria,?she began, 搒he抯 . . .?She read D-Day抯 face and gave up. 揙kay,?she said. 揥e抣l think of something.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?A white-and-red blur came into the aircraft through the
rear where one of the bay doors used to be. The blur settled onto the ground
nearby, revealing it to be a massive, seven-foot-tall, powered-armor suit in
gleaming white梑adly battered, smudged, dented, scarred, scraped, and stained,
but still impressive. A huge red J marked the suit抯 front.
牋牋牋牋牋?揧o,?said The Mighty Jane by external speakers, once the
whine from her maneuvering jets had fallen. Jane抯 sweat-drenched black bangs
were plastered to her face, but her blue eyes were alive with strength. She
gave Sandi Griffin抯 body a brief look and her expression grew sad, but she
made no comment. 揝o, you want the maybe good news or the definitely bad news
first??she said.
牋牋牋牋牋?揃ad news,?said D-Day. 揥hy not.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟he inside port engine is on fire. The fuel line through the wing is ruptured, and the whole wing could explode at any moment.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 thought as much,?said Amy. 揟he engine went out just before I left the cockpit. And the good news??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑抦 not sure if it抯 good news or what,?said Jane. 揟ommy was holding on to me when we crashed through the port side, forward. When I flung him off, he went through the near port engine. I didn抰 see him after that. He抯 probably in the drink.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揂nd swimming to shore,?said D-Day gloomily. 揋ood news only in that we don抰 have to fight him here, and we can concentrate on getting the hell out. He抣l be back, though.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揌ey, Mighty,?said Amy, looking around. 揅an you carry a load of prisoners and evacuees inside that Humvee over there, if we can get them in it??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揃ack to shore??Jane抯 mouth twisted and she studied the Humvee with one blue eye closed. 揂t full power, sure, but it will be close. My suit抯 down to thirty-seven percent after the beating Tommy gave it. It抯 going in for major repairs once we get back. Man, I thought he抎 never quit.?She unsnapped her helmet and raised it, breathing deeply. 揊resh air. Smells better than I do.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揙ur work here is done,?said Amy. She looked at D-Day. 揙r is there something else you have to do??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day was peering at the Humvee that Amy had indicated
earlier. She abruptly began walking toward it, her face set.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇aria??called Jane. 揥hat抯 going on??She followed,
walking, as did Amy Barksdale.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day reached the Humvee and grabbed for a door handle,
pulling it open. Inside the Humvee was a man in an executive suit, cowering on
the floor in the back and waving a white handkerchief over his head.
牋牋牋牋牋?揟ruce??said Eric Schrecter.
牋牋牋牋牋?揅hairman Li抯 legal advisor,?said D-Day. 揟he man my mother worked for until she discovered his duplicity and exposed his underworld connections, leading to his disbarment.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟hat抯 still under review, so I抦 still technically a lawyer, okay??said Eric quickly. 揂nd I am legally out on bail, and all my convictions are being appealed, so I抦 clean, got it? No one has issues with that, I hope.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揥e were going to use that vehicle to get the wounded off this plane,?said Amy, walking up. 揧ou can抰 stay in there unless you抮e wounded, too.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揙h, I can fix that,?said The Mighty Jane, her voice
full of promise.
牋牋牋牋牋?揝top right there! I抦 recording this!?said Eric,
patting his shirt pocket. 揧ou抮e not using proper legal procedures for dealing
with people who have not been accused of any桹UCH!?Grimacing, he grabbed at
his pocket and pulled out a smoldering tape recorder, which he threw out of the
Humvee.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 fried its circuitry with my ECM jammers,?said The Mighty Jane. 揘ow, let抯 talk about your unwounded condition.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o,?said D-Day. She stepped back. 揋et out of the
vehicle.?Eric did as he was told, still clutching his white handkerchief. 揋o
around and start putting the wounded into the vehicle,?said D-Day. 揥e抣l help
with棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揑抦 not doing a thing!?he shouted. 揧ou can抰 legally force
me to do any棓
牋牋牋牋牋?Five-foot-two D-Day lunged at Eric, grabbed him by his
shirt, lifted him from the ground, and slammed his back into the side of the
Humvee. He dropped his hankie.
牋牋牋牋牋?揕isten to me, you sack of rotting meat,?she hissed in a
loud whisper, looking up at Eric抯 frightened face. 揃efore my aunt can blow
your head off or my best friend can tear out your lungs, they抮e going to wait
in line for me to finish with you first. You smeared my mother抯 legal career
when she unearthed your underhanded doings, and you leaked the story about my
father抯 breakdown at that superhero camp in his teenage years. You ruined my
parents and forced them into retirement, and I swore on everything I held dear
to me that I would find the person who hurt them and I抎 make him suffer like
no one had ever suffered before. And now I抳e found you, you lousy bastard, and
you抮e doing to do whatever I tell you to do, the second I tell you to do it,
because that抯 the only thing keeping your miserable evil ass alive right now. Do
you understand me, dirtball?!?She shook him violently as she shouted the
last five words.
牋牋牋牋牋?Eric nodded yes as fast as he could.
牋牋牋牋牋?揟hen do it,?D-Day whispered. She flung the man aside,
then walked off to the staircase to retrieve Sandi抯 body.
牋牋牋牋牋?Pale and sweating, Eric turned to look at Jane and Amy.
Jane clenched a fist, and curved blades jumped out from the forearms of her
powered suit. Amy took a dum-dum bullet from a shirt pocket of her USAF
uniform, then loaded it into her sniper rifle and casually raised the barrel
until it pointed at Eric抯 crotch.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑抦 right on it,?he said, and began looking for
survivors in the cargo bay.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day wrapped Sandi抯 body in a tarp, tied it up with
cargo netting, then gave Linda Griffin抯 body a brief inspection before
dragging Sandi抯 corpse to the Humvee. The glint of a silver communicator pen
in Linda抯 pocket caught D-Day抯 attention. She wrapped a hand in rags and
pulled out the blood-stained pen, wiping it off and examining it. The pen began
to glow. D-Day dropped it, but the glowing continued. In moments, a life-size,
three-dimensional figure appeared over the pen. It was a hologram reflecting
from dust particles in the air.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 should have known,?said Chairman Li, looking down at her. 揟his will go on your permanent record, Miss Morgendorffer.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揧ou抮e about to get your own permanent record,?said D-Day. 揝uperintendent Cartwright got the full story on your misdeeds, everything from your tampering with the budget to your attempts to subvert the government of the United States. You抳e been replaced as principal at Lawndale, and there抯 a cell in a federal prison in Marion, Illinois, waiting for you梖or the rest of your unnaturally long life.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟hey haven抰 gotten through the glorious outer defenses of Laaawndale High yet,?said Chairman Li. 揗y fortress is quite secure from invasion at the moment.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟ell it to the Marines,?said D-Day. 揟hey should be deep inside the building about now.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Li抯 glowered. 揧ou have the same big mouth that your grandfather Mad Dog had,?she said. 揟he apple doesn抰 fall far from the tree.?The holographic image looked around with a tight expression. 揑s Mister Sherman present??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揌e stepped outside for some air.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揂 pity,?said Li with real regret. 揌e抯 immune to almost all damage, but he still has to breathe, you know. And he can抰 swim.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揇oesn抰 know how??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揅an抰. We had to replace his skeleton with iridium bones. He抯 too heavy to swim, and he won抰 be able to hold his breath long enough to walk back to shore on the ocean bottom. Two billion dollars down the drain.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟oo bad there won抰 be other Tommys to take his place,?said D-Day. 揧ou could always get a dog, though. Ooo, sorry, forgot you won抰 be able to keep one in federal custody. You can hug your pillow then, if they give you one. It will have more personality than Tommy ever did.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揇on抰 insult the name of Laaawndale High抯 most famous
student!?the Chairman snapped. 揗ister Sherman led our school to victory in
the Tri-County All-Season Football Championships, Miss Morgendorffer! Talent
like that is to be admired and respected, nurtured like a rare tropical orchid
and lifted to its fullest potential under the shining rainbow light of棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揈xcuse me,?D-Day interrupted, 揵ut can you finish this after I take my anti-vomiting pills??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Li抯 eyes became narrow slits. 揧ou have not won yet, Miss Morgendorffer. And my plans for world domination are still in the works, no matter what happens to me.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揧ou抮e not going to tell me your entire secret plan, are
you? Oh, you are. How predictable. I抦 sorry, I抦 not in the mood to listen to
you drone on for an hour when you can do it to the U.S. Marine Corps in person,
so I抦 going to cut this channel and棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揌ave it your way,?Li growled, her face alive with
hatred. 揃ut my revenge is not yet complete.?The holographic image vanished.
牋牋牋牋牋?When D-Day got back to the Humvee, it was already full. 揟he
courts are going to be packed for years,?said Amy Barksdale, shutting the
tailgate door on the vehicle once Sandi抯 body was placed inside.
牋牋牋牋牋?揂nd the prisons for years afterward,?said Jane. She turned to D-Day. 揙h, and guess who抯 here??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揘ow what??said D-Day tiredly.
牋牋牋牋牋?揘ot a very enthusiastic way to greet a fellow crime
fighter,?said a booming voice from outside the aircraft.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day looked from Jane to Amy.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑t抯 the TomBot,?said Jane. 揧ou remember that thirty-foot blue-green robot with the TV-set head? The one Tom made for the county science fair??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揥ith my dashing good looks being broadcast live on that TV-set head,?came Tom抯 amplified voice. 揚lus sensitive listening devices allowing me to pick up conversations anywhere within a mile, even over the roar of a jet. I understand you need help carrying a Humvee back to shore.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揧ou抮e late,?D-Day grumbled.
牋牋牋牋牋?揧es, so I抳e been informed,?said Tom testily. 揑t took
a while to get here from the Cove, but I抦 here now, okay? Do you mind if I
help out? Jane said her armor was about to go, so棓
牋牋牋牋牋?揑抳e got two hours left in the batteries,?said Jane.
牋牋牋牋牋?揜ight, whatever,?said Tom. 揑 can get the Humvee and save you a little trouble, at least.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?The three women shrugged at one another. 揝ure,?said D-Day. 揅an you come in the back where the door used to be??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?The TomBot, as Jane christened it, proved able to get
into the cargo bay and lift the Humvee without trouble, keeping its contents
level and stable with its gyro-sensors. 揝ee you back on shore,?said Tom抯 TV
image on the robot抯 face. The blue-green giant lifted from the ground on its
antigravity foot-pods, then drifted out the back of the plane. Amy Barksdale
waved goodbye from the driver抯 seat, the last person who could pack into the
vehicle before it left. Something about the scene bothered D-Day. She was
missing something. What was it?
牋牋牋牋牋?揕eaves just you and me now,?said The Mighty Jane to
D-Day梑ut she stopped when D-Day raised her hand for silence. Jane waited as
D-Day watched the descent of the TomBot once it left the aircraft, and the
robot抯 flight toward the coast.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day finally lowered her hand and turned to Jane. 揌e抯 over a mile away now and out of hearing range,?she said. 揕isten桰 want you to know that I抦 not going out with Tom.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揑f this is about that kiss,?said Jane, looking uncomfortable, 搕hat was Li抯 doing. And Tom and I broke up yesterday, anyway. We weren抰 right for each other. You can go out with him if you want.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o,?said D-Day. She bit her lip, then went on. 揑抣l find someone else, if that抯 what I want. I won抰 endanger what we have, everything we抳e built. I can抰 do it.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane said nothing, only staring.
牋牋牋牋牋?揝o,?D-Day finished, 搕hat抯 all I had to say. Let抯 get out of here and get some pizza梑ut without Tom hanging around, okay? Just you and me? Like old times? Freakin?Friends forever??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揧eah,?said Jane softly. 揊reakin?Friends forever.?She
turned, blinking back tears, then snapped her helmet down and locked it in
place before walking over to the huge gap at the rear of the aircraft where the
cargo door once stood. There, she admired the view from two miles up, ignoring
the roaring winds around her. 揑抣l carry you with me,?she said, turning up
the speaker volume on her suit. 揑t抣l be easy. Want to eat at that Cuban-run
pizza place in Miami on the way home? Or we can cruise down to棓
牋牋牋牋牋?A thick bare hand came in from outside the aircraft, over
the lip of the floor where the cargo-bay door once stood. It grabbed The Mighty
Jane抯 right foot, lifted her, smashed her three times against the cargo floor
like a rag doll, then flung The Mighty Jane抯 armored body out of the rear of
the plane. The white-and-red blur fell spinning toward the clouds below, limbs
flailing at random.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day stepped back in disbelief. She then saw the hand
grasp a tie-down ring on the floor and pull the rest of the body inside梐nd she
ran for her life toward the front of the plane.
牋牋牋牋牋?揌ey, Misery Chick!?called Tommy Sherman. He stood up and walked into the wind after D-Day, taking his time. There was no hurry now. 揙ne cool thing about being Superman like me,?he yelled, 搃s that I can dig my fingers into airplane metal, even when it抯 flying around. Steel is almost like butter to me. It抯 sort of like mountain climbing or something, or like that guy, uh, Spider-Man, except he sticks to things but I make my own handholds. I like my way a lot better, don抰 you??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day passed scattered piles of weapons and ammunition,
but nothing that could possibly affect The Sherman Tank. And Jane was gone.
D-Day tried not to dwell on that. No matter how damaged her suit was, or what
injuries she抎 taken in that ambush beating, Jane would figure out a way to
recover and get back here. Jane could do it if anyone could.
牋牋牋牋牋?All D-Day had to do was survive until Jane returned梑ut a
crippled, burning cargo aircraft has only so many places to hide. And Jane
might not return in time . . . if she returned at all.
牋牋牋牋牋?Don抰 think that! Stop it! Find a way out of this!
牋牋牋牋牋?揌ey!?came an amused voice not far behind her. 揇on抰 be afraid, Misery Chick! It抯 just me, Tommy 慣he Sherman Tank?Sherman! All your friends got away, but you抮e still here, so let抯 play for a little, okay? I won抰 kill you right away. I抣l make it last. I told you this was your lucky day, didn抰 I??o:p>
Episode 513, Part Five:
TEN THOUSAND FEET INTO HELL!
Or, The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?With Tommy Sherman in casual
pursuit, D-Day ran through the cargo bay for the stairway to the crew deck梪ntil
she saw dark smoke spilling from the hallway leading to the cockpit. She
realized Amy must have sabotaged the flight circuitry, or else Chairman Li had
done it by remote control to make the monstrous jet impossible to steer. She
looked back and saw Tommy trudging toward her with a leering smirk.
牋牋牋牋牋?There was simply nowhere else to
run, unless she wanted to jump out one of the holes in the fuselage. That would
have been fine except there were no parachutes left on the plane that she knew
of. Being carried away by Jane in her powered suit was to have been her escape.
D-Day grabbed for her nearly useless equipment belt, feeling empty pockets and
bare device holders梐nd one last item. She put her plan together in a second
and prayed it was not the last plan she would ever make.
牋牋牋牋牋?揟ommy??she said, forcing herself to stand very still and face him as he came for her. She kept her hands down at her sides after palming the one device she had left. 揟ommy, you win. I surrender.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揅ool,?said Tommy. His grin grew broader, and he did not slow down. 揇oesn抰 mean The Sherman Tank will go easy on you, but cool anyway.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day backed up a step, then made herself step forward again. He was sixty feet away. 揥e need to get off this plane, Tommy,?she said. 揟he wing抯 going to explode, and then we抣l crash.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揝o maybe we抳e got a little time left to play games,?he said. 揟ommy Sherman抯 kind of games.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揥e have to work together if we棓
牋牋牋牋牋?Forty feet. 揝ave your breath, Misery Chick. You抣l need it. Tommy Sherman likes his girls to scream. And Li will come by and pick me up pretty soon. She always does. Tommy Sherman抯 not worried.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?揝he won抰 this time, Tommy. We told her you were dead.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Tommy looked surprised. Twenty feet.
揗e, dead? You told Li that Tommy Sherman was dead??He threw back his
head and roared with laughter, still walking toward her. His right arm loosened
up and drew back, undoubtedly to slap or punch the living hell out of her when
he got within range.
牋牋牋牋牋?Ten feet. Tommy was still laughing.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day wasn抰 as skilled at leaping
as martial-arts masters like Ms. Morris was, but she could move ten feet in
almost any direction in less than a second, when the time called for it. She
sprang at the laughing Tommy Sherman, her right arm shooting out for his face, fingers
squeezing her last weapon.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane Lane抯 Stik-Tite 9000 glue
minigun was dead on target. Tommy Sherman抯 mouth and nasal passages were
suddenly clogged to capacity with a high-pressure blast of ultra-fast-drying,
bond-to-anything-and-everything epoxy that also splattered over his eyes, ears,
and hair.
牋牋牋牋牋?Tommy was faster than D-Day had
guessed. A tremendous blow from his fist took D-Day on her left side, smashing
the ribs below her armpit. She hit the floor and rolled until she was
twenty-some feet from the struggling Tommy, whose hands were clasped to his
face in an effort to pull away the suffocating mass of epoxy.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day, too, was unable to breathe. Knives
of broken bone sliced into her left lung. Run, damn you, run! passed
through her head. She forced herself up to her knees, almost passing out from
the pain, then got to her feet and staggered away for an indefinite time before
she stumbled and fell. Behind her, Tommy Sherman thrashed against the cargo
deck, kicking and pounding as if fighting Death itself. As she struggled to
breathe, D-Day heard the pounding become less violent and more infrequent. She
did not recall the moment when it ceased altogether, though she was aware after
a time that it was quiet in the cargo area, if one did not count the howl of jet
engines and the roaring wind.
牋牋牋牋牋?He抯 immune to almost all damage,
Chairman Li had said, but he still has to breathe, you know.
牋牋牋牋牋?A spasm of intense agony passed.
When she opened her eyes, she looked into a skull covered with rotting flesh,
only a yard from her face. From the color and style of hair covering the skull抯
top, D-Day knew she was again meeting Dr. Margaret 揚sycho?Manson. The
sour-sweet stench of decayed flesh was almost overwhelming, but the wind in the
cargo bay carried most of the odor away.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day noticed an unbroken syringe
filled with a sickly green fluid next to the body and recognized the rare
fluid. Amazonian green rotting viper venom, she thought. So that抯
what was eating her. D-Day tasted blood in her mouth. Her left lung would
shortly collapse, if it hadn抰 already, but short shallow breaths kept the
stabs of pain to a barely tolerable level.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇aria Morgendorffer,?said a man.
The voice was familiar.
牋牋牋牋牋?Crap. D-Day turned her head,
aware that blood was running out of her mouth. Standing a few feet away, aiming
a small handgun down at her, was Eric Schrecter. He had a parachute strapped to
his back.
牋牋牋牋牋?It all fell into place. D-Day had
not seen Eric inside the Humvee when the TomBot took it away. That was what had
been missing from the picture桬ric. He抎 escaped, and somehow no one had
noticed.
牋牋牋牋牋?揅hairman Li gave me a little bottle
of amnesia spray,?he said, as if reading her mind. 揑 plugged my nose and
spritzed a little around before that blue robot carried off the Humvee, allowing
me to hide and later collect the last available parachute on this flight. Li抯
sending a drone out to pick me up, so I don抰 expect to tread water for long,
if at all.?There was no sniveling in his voice, no trace of the frightened man
D-Day had ordered around earlier. D-Day merely stared at him, not trusting her
ability to speak.
牋牋牋牋牋?揘othing to say??said Eric. Unlike
Tommy, he didn抰 smile. 揘o smart, edgy wisecracks? No clever comebacks? Alas.
You should be proud of yourself, eldest child of Helen Pain-in-the-Ass
Morgendorffer. You, a gifted mundane, actually killed the third most powerful
supervillain in history, before he even got a running start on his career of
terror梐nd you did it with a glue gun.?Eric shook his head. 揟he Chairman will
be furious, but she still has other plans, and she still needs an attorney who
knows all the ins and outs of her plans for world domination. Lord, she does go
on about it, doesn抰 she? At least the pay compensates for her ranting. And
speaking of compensation, here抯 a tidbit of knowledge for you. You know what a
six-pack is? It抯 a terrorist technique used on hostages they plan to release,
so the hostages remember what they did wrong. Bullets in both knees, both
elbows, both ankles. We抣l start with棓
牋牋牋牋牋?His right arm straightened, aiming
the gun at D-Day抯 leg. He pulled the trigger. The muzzle flashed and D-Day抯
ears rang. The searing pain from her right knee erased almost everything in
D-Day抯 head.
牋牋牋牋牋?Almost
everything.
牋牋牋牋牋?Even as she reacted to the lightning
bolt of agony, D-Day swung an arm around and snatched up the unbroken syringe
of venom. She sat up, lunged, and jammed it into Eric Schrecter抯 thigh, then
hammered down the plunger with her fist.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day felt a hard punch to her gut
as another gunshot went off next to her head. Her ears deafened by a shrill
whine, D-Day writhed on her back, clutching her abdomen. She had a momentary
glimpse of Eric running for the rear of the aircraft to jump out and escape,
then she forgot about him. Too much hurt inside her, everywhere inside her, too
much hurt to handle at once.
牋牋牋牋牋?Rise above the pain, rise above
the pain, rise above the pain. With both hands clamped over the gunshot
wound in her abdomen, and trying not to stir her ribcage too severely, D-Day
opened her eyes. She was still in the cargo hold of the hijacked Galaxy. She
was still on the floor beside the remains of Dr. Manson. Eric was gone. Bastard.
牋牋牋牋牋?But . . . Eric had the venom inside
him. And it would be working on him at this moment, rotting him from the inside
out as he hung in his parachute, the exquisite and unspeakable torment
prolonged until his befouled body fell apart into the sea below. Li抯 rescue
drone would be wasted.
牋牋牋牋牋?I swore I would make you suffer
for what you did. I swore it, and I did it. See you in Hell.
牋牋牋牋牋?She rose above the pain briefly, thinking of what Eric had said before he shot her. He said he抎 used an amnesia spray, which had certainly affected D-Day as she had completely forgotten Eric for a time, and it had affected Amy, too, and Jane had opened her helmet briefly, so it had gotten her, too?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?The TomBot.
牋牋牋牋牋?Tom was controlling his robot from
the Cove in eastern Maryland, where his family was staying. He should have seen
or heard Eric抯 escape, because the TomBot could not possibly be affected by
the amnesia spray, and it had such sensitive listening devices. And it was so
large, it could see down over everything.
牋牋牋牋牋?So, Tom knew of Eric抯 escape. He
had to know梐nd he did nothing about it.
牋牋牋牋牋?Tom Sloane was working for Chairman
Li.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day groaned, even though it hurt terribly
to do it. The TomBot had carried the Humvee away. All the live prisoners would
be back with Chairman Li in minutes, with CIA Special Agent Amy Barksdale as
their ace-in-the-hole prisoner. And Sandi抯 body.
牋牋牋牋牋?No, she protested. That抯
impossible. Tom抯 been cleared time and again by security scans of his entire
past and lie detector tests Jane and I secretly gave him. He can抰 be evil. But
why抎 he do it? Is he being mind-controlled by the Chairman again? Or is he
being forced to work for her? He said yesterday that his younger sister Elsie
was overdue from a ski trip to Wyoming. Did Li kidnap her and use her to make
Tom work for L.U.C.I.F.E.R.?
牋牋牋牋牋?What the hell else could go wrong
now?
牋牋牋牋牋?The Galaxy shivered as a massive
explosion jarred the air. D-Day turned her head and saw a gigantic ball of
flames forming in the forward half of the cargo bay from the ruptured fuel
line. The yellow flames then roared down at her like a freight train, filling
the width of the bay.
牋牋牋牋牋?With her last bit of energy, D-Day
rolled toward the opening where the rear cargo door had stood before Jane tore
it away. She was too far from the gap when the flames reached her梑ut the
flames pushed a shockwave of air ahead of them like a piston, and the searing
pressure threw her out of the cargo bay to tumble through the air, ten thousand
feet above the blue Atlantic ocean. Her last view of the Galaxy was to see it
erupt into a two-hundred-foot fireball. The wings and tail section separated
from the fuselage, then the monster jet disintegrated as a second, even greater
explosion consumed it. Thousands of smoldering pieces of wreckage fell from a
vast black cloud to the sea.
牋牋牋牋牋?And D-Day fell with them, blue sky
and blue sea spinning about her. Her glasses were gone, too, but she was in too
much pain to care.
牋牋牋牋牋?I抦 going to die. It will be over
soon. It will all be over, and I won抰 hurt anymore. She thought of her
best friend Jane Lane, how they had met, how they had fought crime and evil
together to become one of the most famous super-duos in history. She prayed
that Jane still lived and would go on without her. Jane was the greatest. D-Day
thought of her parents and sister, too, and how she loved and missed them, but
her thoughts always returned to Jane. I love you, she thought, sending
the words away as a prayer. I love you, Jane, my best and only friend. I抣l
wait for you on the other side, however long it takes. The pain in her gut
became too great. Still tumbling, the ocean coming up to meet her, she passed
out.
牋牋牋牋牋?A jolt awakened her. She was moving
swiftly through the air, but she didn抰 seem to be falling. I抦 dead. I抦 a
spirit flying. 揑 love you, Jane,?D-Day whispered when she awoke, her
words almost carried away by the wind. Her lungs ached from the effort.
牋牋牋牋牋?揕ove you, too, amiga,?said The Mighty Jane, next to her face.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day opened an eye. Below her was
the sea, a hundred feet away. She was cradled in two massive white-metal arms,
her right cheek pressed against a wide fishbowl helmet. Jane Lane looked back
from inside the helmet. Her face was covered with drying blood from a long gash
over her right eye, doubtless acquired when Tommy Sherman slammed her against
the floor before throwing her out of the plane. Her right eye and cheek were
turning black from bruises. The inside of her helmet and the controls in front
of her face were spattered with blood and spit.
牋牋牋牋牋?揝orry I was late,?Jane went on, her voice amplified through external speakers. 揌ad some trouble with the suit. Down to thirteen percent or something. You miss me??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day nodded and coughed. It hurt
like hell. Blood ran from her mouth and streaked across the outside of the
helmet. Everything hurt from her shattered knee to her gunshot wound to her
smashed chest. Her cuts and bruises and burns were nothing.
牋牋牋牋牋?揌ang on, amiga,?said The Mighty Jane, urgency in her voice. 揑 want you to hang on. Don抰 go out on me yet. I抳e got enough power left in this Buzz Lightyear costume to get us to Atlantic City, but it抣l be close. Don抰 go anywhere without me, okay? Just stay with me, all right? Stay with me.?/p>
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day nodded again. It hurt to
breathe, but she could still breathe. She closed her eye and felt the wind roar
around her. Her mind rambled ahead.
牋牋牋牋牋?The days to come would be busy, she
knew. They had to find out if Chairman Li had been captured in her underground
fortress below Lawndale High, then figure out why Tom was helping Chairman Li
when there was every evidence that he wasn抰 a bad guy. And an emergency
mission to rescue Amy Barksdale would have to get off the ground ASAP, perhaps
that very night. Maybe Quinn and the Fantastic Club could do it, if they could
pull in a few new members with sufficient talent. They抎 want to get Sandi back
for burial, for sure.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day then remembered the serum. She
raised a hand and felt the vial still safe in the crushproof pocket in her
leather outfit. Sandi抯 sacrifice was not in vain. The Fantastic Club was
saved.
牋牋牋牋牋?Whatever happened next in the war
against Chairman Li, D-Day knew she and Jane would be there, too.
牋牋牋牋牋?But that was then. And this was now.
牋牋牋牋牋?D-Day opened an eye again. Jane
glanced at her and winked. D-Day tried to smile back, but she closed her eye
instead and let her best friend carry her to the distant shore.
Stay Tuned for the Thrilled
Sequel:
IS
IT RAGNAROK YET?
Same Lawndale Time, Same
Lawndale Channel!
*
Ken
Edwards: 揕ucky Strike?(pedophile teacher)
General
Buck Conroy: 揟his Year抯 Model?(warmongering mercenary)
Angela
Li: 揈steemsters?(Stalin-esque high-school principal, misappropriates funds)
Linda
Griffin: 揋ifted?(self-centered power freak)
Jim:
揟he Daria Hunter?(warmongering paintball-field owner)
Upchuck:
揟he Invitation?(lecherous, smarmy high-school student)
Bruno*:
揑 Don抰?(criminal)
Eric
Schrecter**: 揚ierce Me?(lawyer, Helen抯 boss)
Tommy
Sherman: 揟he Misery Chick?(egomaniac thuggish jerk, former football player)
Margaret
Manson***: 揈steemsters?(high-school psychologist fond of testing)
Janet
Barch: 揕ab Brat?(loud, misanthropic science teacher, abuses male students)
Ms.
Morris: 揝ee Jane Run?(bad-tempered, quasi-sadistic phys-ed teacher)
Angel
Li, Linda Griffin, Jim, Upchuck, Eric Schrecter, Margaret Manson, and Janet
Barch are also mentioned and shown in The
Daria Diaries and The Daria Database.
*
Bruno is an off-screen character mentioned only in passing as a former beau of
Rita Barksdale. He resides in a federal correctional facility.
**
Eric Schrecter isn抰 really evil, per se, but he dominates Helen抯 time at home
with his phone calls, overworks her, and won抰 promote her, so . . .
***
Ms. Manson isn抰 in touch with her student clients and was responsible for
putting Daria (and perhaps others) into Mr. O扤eill抯 self-esteem class. Her
love of testing appears to be unlawful with regards to its use in school, at
Ms. Li抯 behest.
Original:
10/24/04, modified 04/06/05