âHereâs where your team will be staying,â Their guide said, motioning to the heavy oak door.
âUh,â Perry grunted, dragging his feet into the room. He was too tired to appreaciate how stunningly well-appointed it was, with gold trim and leather upholstery. He was too tired. Sixteen hours of battling giant silver aquatic caterpillars on next to no sleep will do that to you.
âEach of your beds is in one of those rooms,â The guide said, pointing to three opened doors with massive king-sized beds on them.
âWe werenât sure if you three wereâ¦together, so we arranged for separate rooms, but youâre free to sleep however you like. The beds are big enough.â
âUgh,â Natalie grunted, shrugging her toolbox off her shoulder and climbing into one of the beds, face-down. You could probably fit six of her on there.
âOver there is a kitchen and a fully stocked refrigerator. Thereâs even eggs and bacon.â
Eggs and bacon was a luxury item given the odds of a chicken or pig Triggering and becoming the hyperintelligent overlord of the farm, waging a protracted war against the humans that oppressed them.
That had only happened a handful of times, but it caused no end of trouble to the meat and dairy industry.
Piggles the Hog was still at large and there was a $18000 dollar per pound bounty placed on him by the Agricultural Administration of Roosevelt City.
Not that Perry was going to cash in on it, Piggles was based on the west side of the continent. He was just surprised at the presence of bacon.
âDibs,â Perry and Heather groaned, wrestling each other out of the way as they stumbled towards the kitchen. Things quickly became violent, and Heather prevailed by wrapping around Perryâs neck and hands while simultaneously reaching out and opening the refrigerator, grabbing the eggs and a frying pan before Perry channeled every fiber of muscle he could and struggled to his feet, wrenching Heather away from the frying pan.
Heather chuckled as he tried to toss her off, but simply stretched where he pushed, keeping the rest of her body wrapped around him while she adjusted and started up the gas stove.
âThe ummâ¦bathrooms are over there,â The guide said. âWould you like another package of eggs and bacon?â
Perry and Heather glanced over at the guide. The man seemed nervous at the sight of Heather zip-tying Perryâs hands behind his back with her malleable body.
The supermodelâs body language was nervous, but he had his hand buried in his pocket. Interesting.
âIs that an option?â Perry asked.
âOf course. Thereâs nothing too good for the heroes of Washington city. Iâll inform your agent that you donât likeâ¦sharing.â
âThanks!â Perry said moments before the man hustled out the door like he was being chased.
âSomethingâs off.â Heather said, unwrapping from Perry and grabbing the eggs, splitting her hand into twenty-four fingers and cracking all the eggs simultaneously, dumping them into the pan and beginning to scramble them.
âDamnit, I donât like scrambled!â Perry said, grabbing the salt and pepper from the shelves above the stove before snagging the cheese and chives, chopping them up fine to add to the dense dinner.
âDonât be so slow next time,â Heather said, accepting the chopped up ingredients and folding them into the mixture. âMake some toast.â
âSo did you notice his hand in his pocket?â Perry asked as they cooked.
Heather shook her head. âI was talking about how they were trying to recruit us away from Franklin city with the food, living conditions, and hotties.â
âYeah, I noticed that too,â Perry said, loading up a piece of toast with eggs and bacon. âI mean, unless this is the standard of living for everyone here, but I doubt it.â
âThe hotties could also be a side-effect of widespread designer-babies.â Heather said, pointing a spatula at him.
Perry frowned.
âBio-Master lives here. Since the mid-ninetiesâ
âThe food!â Perry said.
âThe food.â Heather said nodding. Bio-Master was the tinker you would want to oversee the creation of new species of fruits and vegetables that could withstand the pressure of modern life, and drop itself into automated carts on command.
Perry thought about it for a moment. âYou know, that could account for a low rate of Triggering. If these actually are designer babies, a single unanticipated flaw in their design could diminish the average rate of Triggering across the board for an entire generation and leave the city understaffed. Say if they were designed to be spectacularly mentally stable, they donât get stressed enough to trigger.â
âGuy looked stressed enough to me,â Heather said, taking a bite of her S.O.S.
âYou notice all the native capes on the wall were normal-looking?â Perry asked, reviewing his memories. âYouâre actually the most attractive cape in the city.â
âShut up, you uggo, I know it.â Heather said around a mouthful of eggs.
âYou knowâ¦That would cause a problem if suddenly only the poor kids were the ones Triggering-ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âYour bourgeoise is showing.â Heather said.
âbecause they were the ones who couldnât afford designer babies, and this new generation of supers decided they donât like the way things are being run.â Perry continued, ignoring her.
âSo, you think we stepped into the middle of a period of social upheaval, and the ruling class is bribing us to stay here and keep them in power?â Heather asked.
âDude, Iâve only been off the wall here for about half an hour.â Perry said. âI canât decode a cityâs politics at a glance.â
âIdunno man, youâre sharper than you used to be. And you used to be pretty sharp.â Heather said.
âShut up, you dummy. I know it.â Perry said.
âSo why did you mention his pocket?â Heather asked, opening up drawers until she found a sharpie and some card-stock.
âI think he had some kind of emergency measure meant to keep us under control should we become unruly,â Perry said as he carefully arranged the remaining eggs and bacon into a neat pile on a plate.
âWall-zappers or something?â Heather asked, glancing around the room between writing on the card-stock.
âOr something,â Perry said, wrapping the plate in cellophane.
Perry held out his hand and Heather dropped the card in it.
Hey Hardcase, I hope you like your eggs scrambledâ¦Paradox and I arenât too tired, so weâre going to go sticking our noses where they donât belong, because weâre bored. The walls may have surveillance and control mechanisms. Disable them at your leisure. If we donât come back by tomorrow morning, you can assume weâre in deep shit.
-â¡W&P
Perry carefully set the card in the middle of the plate and put the entire thing in the fridge.
Perry and Heather were physically beyond human standard, and so they could shrug off sixteen hours without too much difficulty, but Natalie was baseline human, and not only that, her brain was firing on all cylinders, which was probably stealing even more energy from her body.
The tiny tinker needed her sleep.
âWhere do you wanna go first?â Heather asked.
Perry shrugged. âFunkytown? I wanted to see if there was anything Franklin city doesnât have while I was here, and we can ask around for your dad while weâre there.â
âGood a place as any,â Heather said, snagging Anya as they walked out the door, folding the heavy iron club into her arm.
***
âSo You guys found a way to breed Manitian earth-worms in captivity?â Perry asked, leaning up against sunbleached brick wall as he chatted with the Orglaf, a three-foot tall hole-dwelling creature that looked something like a humanoid naked mole rat.
âIndeed, the natural essences on Earth are generally too faint to raise them, however, some of the most isolated forests on the continent are able to grow worms approximately six inches long.â
âIâm told they grew twelve feet long and used to eat people.â Perry said, arms crossed.
âI see youâre quite well-educated, human,â the Orglaf delicately wiped away the mucus streaming from its face. It was meant for burrowing, but aboveground it was just gross.
âMy familyâs from Manita,â Perry said with a shrug.
âI havenât seen you around Washington,â The orglaf salesman standing in front of the tank full of worms said with a frown.
âWe live in Franklin city.â
âAh! Welcome to the bounteous Washington city, brother, I tell you what, have an extra worm for each five you buy.â
âHow much for the whole tank?â Perry asked.
âUmmâ¦.â The orglaf looked hesitant, glancing back and forth between Perry and the tank of wriggling worms on display.
âWhat do you want an entire tank full of worms for!?â Heather whispered harshly into his ear.
âTheyâre a key ingredient in earth-controlling spells,â Perry said. âBut that was when they were twelve feet long. These probably donât have much essence, so Iâm gonna need a lot to compensate. And I hear they taste great.â
âFifty thousand.â
âforty one,â Perry said. âYou offered one in six free, which is a sixteen point seven percent discount.â
âWhere are you going to keep them!?â Heather demanded.
âIn the tank, obviously.â
âHonored customer. If theyâre not taken out of the tank and returned to the earth by the end of the day, they will die and begin to rot. I donât know if it was mentioned in the texts you read regarding them, but Earth-worms have some of the most pungent rotting scent in the animal kingdom. Iâm told a human got some on his shirt and killed himself to escape the odor.â
Perry considered that.
âHow about all the dried ones you have, then. They still have all their organs, correct?â
âIf youâre planning on using them for ritual magic, you could hardly pick a worse ingredient than dried earth-worm!â the orglaf cried. âThe quality has been vastly diminished and tainted by dessicants. No, theyâre solely for eating.â
âAs a fellow manitian, I want you to trust me when I say that wonât be a problem.â Perry said.
âVery well. I will take your word for it,â the salesman said, wiping his twitching nose again before turning to Heather.
âAnd was there anything you wanted, young lady? Iâve got the finest Mox-feathers to enhance your natural beauty to unearthly radiance.â
âWhy does everyone assume I want beauty products?â Heather asked.
âAt least heâs not commenting on your virginity.â Perry muttered as he counted out three hundred dried worms worth of cash.
âAh, I see you two have encountered a unicorn in the past,â The salesman said. The three of them shared a silent moment, staring into the distance, before Heather broke the stalemate.
âNo, Iâm looking for information.â
âI am not an information seller,â The orglaf said with a shrug, his loose skin sliding over his shoulders and neck.
âI just want to know if thereâs a new shapeshifter in town. Telling you what he looks like might be pointless, but he has a habit of crawling into peopleâs sinuses and exploding their skulls from the inside.â
âIâve not heard of anyone like that,â The orglaf said, waving dismissively âBut Mama Kris might have the information you seek. The hag is an information dealer, unlike myself.â
âHag?â
âDemonic spirits that take the form of an old woman. Itâs not a slur, thatâs what they actually are,â Perry said. âJust donât promise to pay them in anything other than money.â
âI see.â Heather glanced over at the ornate iridescent feathers hanging up above the snot-covered salesman. âHow do Mox feathers make you more radiant?â She whispered into Perryâs ear.
âLiterally.â Perry said. âGrind them into a powder and apply them, and they will control the way light hits your face so that youâre always in the most flattering lighting, regardless of your environment.â
Heatherâs eyes widened.
âHalf a dozen feathers please.â
Perry raised an eyebrow.
âMy luggage got melted by spider-venom, remember?â
âAh,â Perry glanced down at his T-shirt.
A wild prince has appeared!
(Marry)
(F*ck)
->(Kill)
âI donât think you should take me with you when you guys go to buy some spare clothes. I seem to be cursed.â
âToo bad, youâre coming. You need new clothes. And deodorant.â Heather said.
âLow blow, but accurate.â Perry said.
Heather turned her attention back to the salesman and slipped him another hundred bucks. âWhereâs this Kris hag?â
The salesman pocketed the extra cash with a grateful nod. âTwo blocks down that way, under a neon sign.â He pointed down the street. They could see the light of the sign from where they stood.
âThank you sir,â Perry said as the orglaf deposited the woven basket of dried worms in his hands.
Perry slipped one out of the basket and started chewing on it as they walked down the streets of âTwilight Zoneâ. Washington city needed a better naming sense. Funkytown was way better.
âYou want one?â Perry said, waggling a dried worm at Heather while he chewed on the first. They were actually pretty good salted and dried. A bit like a tougher version of dried salmon.
âArenât you going to use those for spells?â Heather asked.
âYou think I can finish all these?â Perry asked, motioning to the armload he was carrying.
âAlright,â Heather took the proffered worm and started chewing. âHey, not bad.â
âYou know, they couldnât raise these things at all ten years ago. I found that out when I was doing research for spells. They just held onto the eggs in case. I think Earth might be getting more magical over time.â
âNo, really?â Heather asked, motioning to the dog-man riding a giant centipede alongside them.
âIt just makes me wonder if the earth-worms habitat is expanding, and whether or not there are any Earth-based organisms who have their own essences.â
Could help with my supply chain issues. Perry was distinctly aware that a lot of his magical ingredients werenât going to be around forever.
They stopped under the neon sign, looking up at it.
Madame Krisâs Answers from the beyond.
OPEN
They glanced down at the brightly colored piece of paper plastered to the front window.
Surgeon Generalâs Warning.
The surgeon general does not acknowledge the existence of a soul. However, promising your soul to certain creatures in exchange for services rendered can lead to ennui, malaise, loss of appetite, suicidal tendencies, hallucinations and psychotic breaks that end in murderous rampages.
âSeems like the right place,â Perry said, wiping the salt and grease off his hand before opening the door.