âSo what now?â Heather asked.
âNowâ¦we pray one of the venoms we acquired will do what we need it to do,â Perry muttered. He already knew which one he was banking on, but it was best not to say anything until after theyâd performed extensive tests.
âCheck up on the twins?â Heather said.
âMm.â Perry nodded and opened a portal.
âMommy!â Sera shrieked and barreled through the portal, nearly knocking Heather over.
The brass-haired mother swept her daughter up and staggered back through the portal, aggressively nuzzling her the entire time, eliciting shrieks of delight.
âHowâs it going?â Perry asked Gareth, who glanced up from his tablet and shrugged before returning his attention to Minecraft.
âHe might need less tablet time,â Perry mused to Heather.
âDaddy!â Gareth said, tossing aside the tablet and giving Perry a big hug.
âNice save, kid.â Perry said, patting Gareth on the back.
âHowâd they do, Annette?â Perry asked, glancing over at the Elysian Attendant, who had dark circles under her eyes.
âTheyâreâ¦healthy.â She offered, as diplomatic as Perry expected an Elysian Attendant to be.
âHow did you guys enjoy Australia?â Perry asked.
Seraâs eyes widened in delight. âThereâs a spider arcade! Annette didnât want to take us in but I ââ
âWe saw a HUGE lizard, it was like this bi-â
âA cock-o-dile! I tried climbing in itâs ââ
âAnd the police got involved, but Annette used-!
âSo we spent most of the day in a cage. It was boring.â
âI met a stranger who stabbed someone! He was about to show me how, but Annette-â
âWhen she went to talk to the Po-leese, someone gave us a ride to-â
âTurns out they were a supervillain trying to ummâ¦run someâ¦us? They didnât really try to make us run at a-â
âAnnette talked to me in my head, so I used the knife Gary gave me and-â
âWe had this awesome fight!â
âIt was just like you said, Daddy! The superheroes found us, and there was this trash-talk, then they fought-â
âWE fought!â Sera shouted.
âNuh uh!â
âI kicked him in the peen!â Sera shouted.
âThat was just a henchman!â
âStill counts!â
Garethâs face wrinkled up like someone who disagreed mightily, but wasnât interested in dying on that particular hill. Instead, he changed tracks.
âThereâs an ice cream shop-â
âWe got ice cream after!â
âThey make it out of real ice cream! Out of cows!â
âDaddy, whatâs a cow? Can we get one?â
Perry processed their rapid changes in direction and overlapping stories of how the last couple days went, and decided that Annette probably deserved a medal of her own.
From the childrenâs myopic view of how things had gone down, he had to assume that a lot of legwork had gone on in the background to make things safer and less scary for them.
So much so that Annette hadnât had time to whip them into shape like sheâd intended, Perry supposed. Almost getting kidnapped and trying to jump into a crockâs mouth were probably the tip of the iceberg.
âGood job,â Perry murmured, patting Annette on the shoulder.
âYouâre out a few million.â she whispered back, seemingly shrinking into her seat.
âEh.â Perry grunted. It didnât bother him. His superpower was the closest thing to printing money, and those numbers had become meaningless years ago.
âCan you get them packed up to go?â Perry asked the angelic babysitter. âWeâre probably going to be leaving tonight.â
Sera mustâve heard him, because she exploded.
âBut I donât wanna go yet!â Their 4-year-old daughter shrieked.
âSometimes you gotta go before youâre ready,â Perry said, kneeling down. âThatâs life. Itâs not bad, itâs just the way it is.â
It took less time than Perry expected to calm the twins down and get them ready to go. Maybe Annette had done a little child-wrangling in her free time because they were just a tiny bit better behaved than the last time heâd seen them, a few days ago.
Perry quickly checked the time stamp on his HUD, which auto updated to the local time and date.
Support the author by searching for the original publication of this novel.
No, they hadnât gotten trapped in a time warp like when heâd gone after Professor Replica. So Annette really had gotten through to them a bit in four days.
Not bad.
Also, thatâs really good, because I didnât want to be in Australia longer than a week. Four days is ahead of schedule.
Once the kids were packed, they portaled to the lab, where Gnaâkis and Lam were âdoing scienceâ.
Lam had made herself a tiny light-bending science coat to match Gnaâkisâs. The spider princess was perched on the demon lordâs shoulder taking notes on a tiny pad while Gnaâkis marched from station to station, dictating experiment results and possible modifications to the variables.
âMy lord!â Gnaâkis said as soon as Perry arrived. âCan I keep her? The sheer number of frequencies that her webbing can carry would allow me to increase the data carried by optic cables by a factor of-â
âSure, as long as sheâs fine with it,â Perry said.
âIâm fine with it!â Lam squeaked.
âShe can talk!â Sera said, her eyes boggling while Lam wiggled her legs to freak out the squares.
âSheâs a genetic freak, likely the result of inhumane experiments in horizontal gene transfer.â Perry said.
âI am!â
âCan I have her?â Sera asked.
âNo. Gnaâkis is much more capable of raising an intelligent spider that may eventually become the size of a blue whale. Also sheâs a person.â
âAww.â Sera pouted.
âWhere are we at with the venom, Gnaâkis?â Perry asked, moving the discussion forward.
âAh!â the demon lord wearing an alt-punk girl skin exclaimed, raising her finger. âWeâve made some good progress! Except for when one of the wasps got out and almost killed me.â
âExcept for that,â Perry said, nodding.
âLemme show you,â Gnaâkis said, motioning for them to follow.
So, after some experimentation, many failed attempts to âmilkâ the venom out of the wasp, and one escape attempt, we figured out a method that proved somewhat reliable.â She said, motioning for Perry to view one of the glass cases.
Inside was a Dickbag wasp, the size of a manâs palm and busily building a mud nest on the side of a fake rock.
âSo the easiest way to harvest venom turned out to be completely mundane. In fact, if there are any powers or magic at all, it tends to go haywire. So what we did was make a hollow decoy, and when it stung itâ¦â
She produced a rubber mouse, squeezing it a bit in her hands to demonstrate itâs flexability, then she stuck the mouse inside the case on a long thin stick, wiggling the mouse in front of the wasp to piss it off.
It didnât take much.
The wasp leapt on the mouse and stung it six times before it stopped moving.
Once the wasp lost interest, Gnaâkis withdrew the mouse and opened the plug in the butt, pouring out a few drops of venom from the hydrophobic interior.
âTah-dah!â
âSo how does it work?â Perry asked.
âIt oscillates Attunement.â She said.
âExcuse me?â Perry asked.
âThe venom has a potent cocktail that raises and lowers Attunement in a repeating pattern that looks like this.â
She wrote out a function that described a violent wavelength that lost a little bit of potency every time it reached a new height, gradually evening out to nothing.
âMost animals with any kind of triggered ability will die, hereâ¦â She pointed at the highest Attunement. âOr here,â She pointed at the lowest point of the first wavelength.
âSomething with fire powers will explode here,â She pointed again at the top of the wavelength. âSomething that uses itâs powers to ignore the square cube law, like spiders, will suffocate, here,â She said, pointing at the bottom. âItâs a surprisingly effective strategy.â
âSo thatâs why it doesnât always kill humans.â Perry had suspected it had targeted superpowers somehow, but Gnaâkis had done him a favor by discovering exactly how it worked while he was assisting Aussie Man with The Butthole.
âIndeed, although being stung with one of these things actually has a very high rate of Triggering the recipient.ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âReally?â
âOf the people who donât die, the number of Trigger events is about five percent.â Gnaâkis explained. âWhich is wildly higher than the statistical average of 0.1%. I went through some of the publicly available data on hospital visits in Australia.â
âWow. Probably shouldnât tell the Australians about that.â
âThe chances of dying are higher, so most people wouldnât do it,â Gnaâkis said.
Perry met her gaze. âDonât tell the Australians, okay? I donât want that many dead people on my conscience.â
âSureâ¦â she said, sighing before moving on. âAnyway, you were looking for a way to use it to I.D. mimics.â
âIndeed.â
âSo, what weâre interested in is this portion of the wavelength,â she said, circling the tight, waves near the end of the function.
âSo you diluted it down, figured out a way to increase the frequency and decrease the amplitude, and applied it to a test subject?â Perry asked.
The amplitude was the power of the swings, that would cause things to explode or suffocate from having too much or too little Attunement. Perry was on the âexplodingâ side of the spectrum. The frequency would dictate how quickly the venom would flip polarity from boosting Attunement to dampening it. At the moment, its frequency was fairly low, with a high amplitude.
To make something that could screen humans from mimics, they needed to decrease the venomâs lethality (Amplitude) and increase its rate of change (Frequency) so that it caused the mimicâs abilities to fire off randomly while not harming a normal human. Or even a superhuman, for that matter.
âYou know me so well.â
It was the logical next step.
âCome, come,â Gnaâkis said, ushering them to follow her, Lamâs oversized spidersilk coat flowing over her shoulder like a tiny cape.
âIt took a while, and a lot of dead mimics, but I found I could raise the concentration, then remove most of the primary chemical responsible for amplitude, and it worked like a charm.â
She motioned to a class cage with a crying human inside.
âSo if you-â
âOne second,â Perry said, turning to kneel in front of Sera and Gareth. âYou guys wanna go say hi to your mom? Me and Gnaâkis have some boring grown-up work to do.â
ââ¦Why?â Sera asked, while Gareth glanced past Perry before gazing up at him with suspicion.
âI just donât want to bore you guys. This could take Alllâ¦.daaaayâ¦â
âIâll take them.â Heather said, glancing past Perry at the mimic in a cage, obviously understanding the nature of the upcoming experiment.
ââ¦okay!â Sera said, while Gareth continued to give Perry suspicious glances.
Portal.exe.
âNat!â Heather said, stepping through the portal into Natalieâs office, dragging the twins along with her.
Once the portal was closed, Perry heaved a sigh and stood up.
âAlright, do what youâre gonna do.â Perry said, motioning for Gnaâkis to continue.
âPlease, donât! I didnât do anything wrong!â The woman said as a limb detached form the side of the cage, bearing an oversized needle. Her voice grew to an ear-piercing shriek as she desperately tried to escape from the needle, before it lunged forward with the speed of a cobra, injecting her with Gnaâkisâs refined venom.
She began convulsing in place, and for a moment Perry suspected they simply had a poor epileptic woman, when her body began melting at random, growing tentacles, wings and teeth, that formed out of her flesh and returned back in a fraction of a second, shuddering at the same pace as her convulsion.
It was messy and horrifying.
Definitely not for four-year-olds.
A minute later, the mimic regained control as the venom ran its course, curling up in the corner of the glass cage and glaring at them hatefully. Perry wasnât sure which one of them was glaring: The woman, or the mimic pretending to be her.
Both seemed likely.
âHave you tested it on a standard human?â Perry asked.
âSome rats.â Gnaâkis said with a shrug. âIt causes convulsions, but most of them are alive.â
âMost?â
âIâm working on it. By its very nature, even the refined venom introduces some stress on the body.â Gnaâkis mused. âMy lord, even if we improve it to the best of our abilities, this is still going to kill some of the humans itâs meant to screen. A small percentage of the very sick, very old, or the very young.â
Perry thought about his children suffering a massive seizure, writhing on the ground in pain. The thought made his eye twitch.
âThatâs unacceptable. Youâve done a great job so far, Gnaâkis. You got us 99% of the way there. Now letâs Paradox it.â