Showing posts with label avak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label avak. Show all posts

Friday, February 28, 2014

Insert Bundles of Fluff Here

"Mrow?"

The white cat clambered out of the tangle of silken sheets, his emotions still racing but slowly being replaced by bafflement. He peered down, unable to resist the cat urge to wash himself. He then shook, and jumped off the bed and onto the rug.

And then there was a Librarian in the room. Something was wrong; he could feel it. He shook his head, trying to clear his mind and school his breathing to calm.

Then he felt it; an overwhelming pull, as if someone had thrown a rope around his spirit and was yanking him backwards. Almost as soon as he realised it, he was a cat again, the edge of the bed a foot above his head.
The violet eyes blinked, then scowled, and he transformed back. Now he was certain something bad was going on, he turned to the door, but realised two things before he put a hand on the handle.

One, he remembered what he had been doing, and his eyes returned to the bed. There was a scrabbly movement underneath the pile of sheets, and a squeak of alarm; he tugged back the silk, and there lay a beautiful black bicolour cat, with four clear white socks and large round mint-green eyes.

"Meow!" said the cat.

Tash…?

His jaw hanging open, he forgot himself and the world heightened again as he was pulled back to feline form. With a grunt he changed back for the third time, and scooped up the cat on the bed, who purred and rubbed her head on his bare chest.

"Ah…" Adrian thought, remembering the second thing…and just what he had been doing. Going a lovely shade of raspberry he glanced down and realised he was stark naked.

He let the cat jump back onto the bed and pulled on the nearest, cleanest clothes. He tossed a ubiquitous trenchcoat over an arm, picked up the cat again, and headed out of his room.

"Holy…!" He saw a lot more cats as he hurried down the corridors, and more worryingly, piles of clothes…he had a slowly-developing idea of where to go, hoping he was wrong…he stepped over and wove around cats as he went towards the tech labs.

A kind of vague pop tune floated out as he got closer to the labs, reminding Adrian somewhat of Velcro in the sound of it. As he peered round the doorway, he saw the only occupant in the lab obliviously humming along to the song, fiddling with a screwdriver and the back of a Walkie-Talkie.

Usually the tech labs were relatively bustling…he answered the question of where the others were as a tabby nearly tripped him up on his dart from Chevila's bonnet to the door.

There was also a large-ish rectangular machine on a trolley with its case off and smoking a little.

"Emily…" he ventured.

"Waa!" The young girl jumped about a foot and dropped her screwdriver. "Oh, Adrian! Sorry. I was jus' rewiring the talkie…"

"Yeah…" he turned to the rather sorry-looking machine, remembering what it was…

"I was gonna say but I forgot. The Anthropomorphiser kinda broke and started spitting sparks so I had to use the fire extinguisher on it. I went into it to fix it, so it's okay now."

Her voice beamed with confidence. "How did it break?" he asked warily, with the cat in his arms scrabbling onto his chest to rest her head on his shoulder.

"I was wanting to test it. You know, I think it has too many controls, it's like it Blue Screened on me."

This machine, a very new prototype invention of the techies, was designed to assist getting non-shapeshifting agents into anthropomorphic fandoms, from anything between Thundercats to The Jungle Book, hence the rather long name. Different levels between a hundred and zero controlled the amount of anthropomorphism created. Becoming alarmed, he approached it and wiped the soot away from its screen…

"Please don't be completely animal… please!"

It was on level two… the only thing missing was the mating instincts…

He sighed; at least that was better than he feared. He lost it again and was suddenly looking up at the Anthropomorphiser with the black cat on top of him; lights were still on within it, and machinery was still whirring.

He changed back; Emily hadn't noticed as she retrieved her screwdriver. He plonked the black cat onto the tabletop.

"Awww! Cute kitty!" Emily squeaked immediately. "Hello! Where'd you come from?"

"Emily… the Anthropomorphiser is still on…"

"Yeah I know. It'll reboot itself after it's cooled down and then it'll be working again."

"It's still emitting the transforming wave…"

"Oh it's okay, it hasn't been tested yet."

"Emily… that's Tash…"

She paused, looking up at him.

"You've made it work – but too well, and now it's broken…" he said, the truth dawning. "You've turned everyone in the Library apart from yourself into a cat!"

OoO

It had taken them two long, scratch-filled hours but at last every cat in the Library had been rounded up and placed in the same room, which had been piled up with cushions and boxes that were expendable if the cats decided to shred them. They had counted twenty-seven in total; Adrian had sent word to all those who were still out on missions or on holiday, and thus unaffected, to hole up somewhere in the fandom they were in and avoid returning to the Library until they had this issue sorted.

Emily longed to be in that room to play with the cats. Adrian had noted that every tail shot vertically into the air when they saw her; the cats also very interested in snuggling with and sitting upon the girl when they could get the chance. However he had sent her back off to the tech labs to sort out the problem with the machine – she had gone only through protest and Adrian's promise she could return later with cat toys and a camera.

Grouping the cats into one room kept them within view, but Adrian had a feeling that he needed to keep them distracted or there might be trouble, especially amongst the men. He was trying to think of a way of sectioning off the corridors that a nimble feline couldn't jump over or crawl through. They seemed to be more interested in him being in the room however, so he took the opportunity to figure which cat was who. He had a packet of markers and a long roll of white elasticated ribbon to tie round each cat's neck.

He pulled the white-socked black cat onto his lap first. "I know exactly who you are, catling," he said to kitty-Tash, stroking behind her ears and listening to her contented purr. He cut a length of ribbon and wrote Tash's name on the fabric, letting the ink dry for a moment before offering the un-inked part for her to sniff. He gently eased it under her chin and tied it around her neck, trimming the knot ends so it would be comfortable. The ribbon was stretchy enough to allow the cat to escape if it was caught dangerously and also to not choke them when they were turned back to human form, but he made it just tight enough to not allow them to scrabble it off themselves. He then placed kitty-Tash back on the floor sporting her new accessory, and she rubbed against his legs and curled up beside him.

He then looked around. One cat, an ordinary brown tabby with white patches on its belly and paws, threaded through the milling crowd and meowed loudly at Adrian.

"Hello, who are you?" Adrian said, picking the cat up and setting it on his lap.

"Meow!" said the cat.

"Uh… huh. You're just meowing. Umm, let's see…" He stroked the cat a few times to calm it, then with red cheeks and not believing he was having to do this, tentatively lifted the tail up to check the gender.

"Meow?" The cat blinked in surprise.

"Ah. Yes. Male. Okay. Er…"

"Meow!" The cat headbutted him gently.

"You're trying to alert me… to something wrong. So that means…" Adrian then noticed a smaller, slightly fluffier cat sat at his feet with its round copper eyes on the cat on his lap. "I think you're Michael?"

The cat's ears twitched at the sound of his name.

"Bingo," said Adrian, writing another ribbon and tying it round kitty-Michael's neck. "And that means you…" he said, letting him jump off and picking up the patient cat, double-checking under the tail, " – must be Claire."

Kitty-Claire purred in response, watching him write her ribbon. She was a calico, white separating the blotches of dual colour, but whereas the two other calicos in the room were black and orange with varying levels of white, she was a pale grey and cream. "Aren't you exquisite. There you go."

He picked up the next cat, a fluffy silver-tabby-and-white, who was much lighter than the other examples of grey in the room, which verged into the dark bluish slate colours. This cat meowed and flailed a little in his grip, and when set on his lap, turned and practically leapt onto his chest, licked the underside of his chin and nuzzled.

"Okay, you're Alice, I've never seen a cat who's actually tried to glomp me before," laughed Adrian, writing her ribbon out. The silver tabby was curious, trying to bite the lid of his pen. She sniffed the ribbon, sneezing as she came across the ink, which allowed him to slip it round her neck. "Now don't you go pouncing on everyone, young lady," he said.

"Meow!" kitty-Alice said happily, accepting a tickle on her neck before leaping down. Adrian followed her path, realising that the cats might be grouping together, and scooped up the tortoiseshell that she tried to leap upon.

"Hello there," said Adrian.

The tortoiseshell, a subtle mottling of orange and black with a single white sock, made a small noise and looked up at him. Adrian looked at her – as he discovered when he lifted the bushy tail, much to the cat's chagrin – then noted kitty-Alice's playful jumping from beside him, trying to catch the tail…

"Louise?" he enquired, and the cat's ears twitched and she meowed softly. "Aww. It's all right, catling. Here, have a ribbon."

He placed kitty-Louise back on the floor, whereupon she was immediately jumped upon by the silver tabby. He picked up a grey-and-white bicolour from nearby, the clear white arranged in a 'tuxedo' pattern against the fine steel-coloured coat. The cat crouched on Adrian's lap, his tail lowered; a clear submissive position, and a frightened one at that.

He stroked the cat gently for a while, trying to reassure him. Alice and Louise were at his feet. He knew exactly who this cat was; one who was still somewhat uncomfortable around Adrian at times.

"You must be Robert," he said, watching the twitch of a response. Kitty-Robert meowed quietly and curled up all the more. Trying to write the ribbon with one hand, he kept up the supporting strokes, talking softly and slowly drawing the ribbon around his neck so as not to startle him. He then picked him up and knocked over one of the stacked floor cushions, placing him on it and watching the two girls go to join him.

Adrian then managed to catch a particular annoyance of his – one cat who was forever pretending to be someone else, in her amusement changing her fur pattern every few minutes when he wasn't looking!

"Your eyes are giving you away, girl," he grinned at the cat in his arms, returning to his chair. Kitty-Phoenixia turned herself completely white and rolled onto her back, batting at Adrian's hand; her violet eyes, even more unnatural in cats than it was in humans, were the one unchanging thing, allowing him to spot her easily. She got a ribbon, and was shooed off.

He was getting better at identifying the agents. The cinnamon Van pattern who liked digging in the piles of cushions was Dave; he squirmed like the billy-oh when Adrian checked under his tail, though what really gave him away was the flash of luminous green in the otherwise amber eyes when his current pile of cushions toppled onto him. Kitty-Jess also struggled, quite considerably too, as if he had interrupted her love of tackling things. She was mostly white with a few black spots.

He finally found Valerie, who he noticed was weaving through all the cats and rubbing heads, purring softly and on a few occasions licking ears or necks compassionately. The cat, an Abyssinian-esque ticked tabby in a pale flecked fawn with a few residual brown markings on her head, ears, legs and tail and a white belly, also seemed to be shepherding some of the other cats away from the doors. She responded immediately to the sound of her name, bounding towards Adrian to sniff his hand.

The next cat he labelled he treated with the utmost care, for the fur was very long and silky, hovering around the ankles as it walked and settling into a soft mound when it sat. The tail was long and thick, making it troublesome to check the gender; the cat squirmed and sat down on Adrian's lap.

He took a moment to marvel at the almost ethereal-looking fur, knowing it would lead him to an answer. She was mostly white, but unlike all the other instances of white in the room, which were solid and bright like the colour of fresh milk, this white was tipped with silver so that it shimmered softly as she moved. The effect reminded him of moonlight. What also gave it away were the patches of light blue – actual blue – on the ears, back and tail.

"Aster?"

It was surprising how elegant Aster looked in cat form, and Adrian was very careful when he tied the ribbon on her neck. It compressed the Persian-esque ruff, and made her look a bit silly. She meowed indignantly at him.

"Sorry, catling," he chuckled, placing her back on the floor.

He then turned his attention to a pair of cats in the corner: the second calico, patched orange and black almost everywhere aside from a white belly and chin. It was playing with a small milk pan and carried a butter knife in its mouth, placing the utensil in the pan and taking it out again. The only thing that could be seen of the second was a pair of teal-green eyes glowing in the shadows; it joined in the game of 'find-the-butter-knife'.

Adrian picked up the calico, pretty certain of who it was. A quick check under the tail – and a shocked hiss from the cat – confirmed it.

"Hello, Rhia," he said, carrying her to his chair to make her a ribbon. She pawed at him playfully, tempting the second cat from the corner; she leapt down newly-ribboned, and Adrian swooped upon her partner, trying to slip away.

Adrian was nearly scratched as he checked under the tail. The slender cat was a jet black self, reflecting grey in the light and with no sign of rusting at all.

"Even as a cat, Cristoph, you're still a ninja…" said Adrian. Kitty-Cristoph struggled as he tried to tie the white ribbon round his neck. "Yes I am making you more noticeable. I know." He set the cat, who was more long squirming legs than body, down next to kitty-Rhia, who purred and rubbed against him, their tails entwining.

Harriet was easy to detect, as she was the grey marbled tabby playing with a cricket ball. Tom, also a grey but a ticked tabby similar to Valerie, took a little thinking – and more squirms – as he checked the tail, but Adrian realised that most of the archaeologists in the room were enjoying digging their way into (and through!) piles of cushions as if in search of treasure. He also identified the last calico in the room, who bore only a sprinkling of orange and browny-black across her otherwise-white ears and back, as Karissa, simply by the virtue of sneaking round all the other cats before she made herself noticeable by falling over dizzy.

He also realised that the groups were definitely hanging together. He tempted the next two closer by clucking gently – another black-and-white bicolour and a graceful green Oriental colourpoint. The green of the Siamese, from grass-green on the paws, face and tail fading to white on her body, gave her away immediately as Lily. Adrian smiled; not even Prohibition could defeat the base coding of one's phenotype, meaning whatever made Lily green would stick around.

"And that means you…" Adrian picked up the bicolour. It was male, but that was expected. Then he spotted what shape the white formed against the black… a radiation symbol.

"Oh, Ben…" Adrian sighed, collaring them both and shooing kitty-Ben off his lap. Where was Avak, he wondered. Those three generally hung round together. He went on a search, following the pair to what seemed to be a box fort and found a semi-longhair cinnamon smoke cat curled up on top of a pile of books and dozing. Stroking the cat's neck made it jump, but the green Siamese kept leaping up in a game of 'catch the fluffy tail'. Identifying the cinnamon as Avak, relieved he had not gotten lost, Adrian managed to slip a label around his neck.

A rather nasal meow from an orange tabby sounded, breaking his reverie, followed by a few headbutts on his leg. The ginger was followed by what had to be the biggest cat in the room, built sturdily as if for cold weather and with a thick chocolate coat with tufts on the ears. Adrian recognised the nasally meow as Gareth, especially after he followed the cat's path and saw the mess made of the nearest clock…

That meant that the brown cat had to be his fiancé, Red. She was not yet a member though she had expressed an interest in joining, and as yet another of these WARG people she had been roped into it by Tash, though there was some ankle-chewing, fish-stealing, and hair-dyeing involved in her introduction. Adrian merely shrugged, remembering her as the red kitten from before, and gave her a ribbon too. His hands came away covered in shed fur and a few nips.

"Speaking of big balls of fluff, hello Miri," he said and he picked up the third bundle of fur in the room, and the second Persian-esque cat. This time the cat was white with random patches of bright, tabbied orange, which as it matched her hair gave her away.

One cat proved very hard to catch, and even more difficult to hang onto. The semi-longhair chocolate bicolour edged further and further away as Adrian approached, hissing with fury, and when he finally managed to grab the cat after a long moment's pause, scratched him on the arm in an attempt to escape. It was hard to check the gender – the cat did not like that one bit – and even harder to tie the ribbon on, as Adrian was almost bitten. This aversion to touch identified the bicolour as Kyle, and he let him go as soon as the knot was secure, kitty-Kyle racing away and leaping over other cats to curl up on a high box and watch everyone, calming down and beginning to purr again soon after.

There were only two pairs left to identify. A second black cat slunk around the edge of the room, shining a rusty Marmite colour in the light, while a small cat in a pretty grey colourpoint ran after it and pounced every so often. The black would often turn to bat the young grey off, but then they would bump heads and continue. The colourpoint was certainly the smallest cat in the room…so therefore the youngest agent…

Adrian walked over and scooped kitty-Inara into his arms. Her tail rose with interest and she meowed, echoed by the rusty-black self now sat at his feet. He wrestled a ribbon round her neck, then crouched down to the cat who had to be Willie, as he and her had been training together for a little while.

The other pair were two tabbies, one blue and one orange though both with white. The orange tabby was chasing a very sorry-looking squad of moving green plastic soldiers…

The Little Plastic Marine Corps shouted their rather tinny thanks to the Librarian as they made a dash for the nearest under-the-door exit after Adrian picked Jared up. He squirmed, wanting to get down; Chloe, the blue tabby, decided to join the fun and leap onto his lap also. He managed to get them both collared, though he had a sinking feeling that he had muddled up their names and was unable to catch either of them to check.

Oh well. So that was every cat named, apart from himself. He made himself one and looped it around the base of his tail. Interestingly he noted that the British and American agents could be told apart simply by their cat body shapes. The Brits had very dense, plush coats, round and widely-set eyes, and sturdy, almost cobby bodies. The Yanks were slightly leaner, tails more pointed and smooth and eyes with much sharper features. The only ones who were unlike either of these were Lily and Cristoph, who were both the slender and narrow-eyed of the Oriental cat; Avak, who was somewhere in between; and Aster, Miriku and Red being bundles of fluff hiding their shape beneath. Robert had taken on a similar shape to the British cats, and Adrian guessed it was because of the historical parallels of his homeland.

He turned into a cat himself, and jumped off his chair to mingle.

OoO

"Here kitty! Here kitty! Go chase the ball!"

At last, Adrian had allowed Emily a break from trying to fix the Anthropomorphiser, and had taken over himself, letting the young girl mind the cats to her heart's content. The machine, still broken but still on at the same time, had been moved to a space in the hall, and Adrian prodded the machinery from beneath while lying on a wheeled board for ease of access. It was being a stubborn thing, refusing to respond much to either of their skills.

Emily threw a bouncy ball over the cats' heads, and several leapt up for it at once. A few, like kitty-Lily and kitty-Claire, had learned that more excitement could be had if they returned the ball to be thrown again, adding to the fun of the game. Several cats had gathered around her, either joining in or curling up next to her and nuzzling close. Most of the other cats basked on cushions or high places and watched lazily.

The soundtrack from The Aristocats was playing in the background, with kitty-Phoenixia glaring at the hi-fi and trying (and failing) to bat the buttons enough to change the sound. Every attempt she made saw her furry coat change to a new pattern each time. She only succeeded in turning the volume up and hitting the 'Repeat' button to make Ev'rybody Wants To Be A Cat play over and over again. Eventually, she did the butt-waggle-jump and leapt to the top of the music player, changing to a lilac lynx point and curling up to purr.

Beneath the machine, Adrian sighed, and not only because the song was beginning to get on his nerves. His knowledge of the very intricate and difficult machine was lacking, having had no hand in its planning or prototyping. He wished a techie was around, but the resident mechanic was currently a ginger tabby and Charis and Pete had gone on holiday somewhere. But he was learning slowly about the machine, interested in finding that it only controlled selection of the wanted species; any colour and pattern combination that resulted came from the individual's genes, and nothing else. He was relieved that there had been a single failsafe built in; that the person who pressed the big green button was spared from being affected by the shapeshifting rays, explaining why Emily hadn't noticed her mistake…he was thankful that he had her to help, though, and she had made some good progress.

No, his major annoyance at the present moment came in the form of a little grey colourpoint…kitty-Inara was determined to chomp on his tail, and every time he would try and move it out of the way she would follow.

Before long Emily was to be found flat on her back, her arms and legs spread-eagled, with at least four cats draped over each limb. Kitty-Aster was curled up on her chest and purring like a lawnmower, enjoying the rise-and-fall movement. Kitty-Harriet lay on Emily's hair and was licking her forehead like a mother cat to her kitten.

The young girl had been giggling, the bouncy ball long forgotten, which initiated almost every cat to purr in response. "Adriaaaaan!" she wailed eventually through her laughter.

"Mmm?" he replied from underneath the machine.

"Heeelp?"

"Why's that then?" He could not keep the mirth from his voice.

"The cats won't move! Hati's licking my face!"

"That's nice, dear!"

"Awww…"

There was then a 'click!' and Emily managed to twist her head enough to see the Librarian with a camera. She gasped indignantly; he just cackled and took some more.

"Please help?"

"All right," he chortled, bending down to shoo the cats off her arms and let Emily sit up and shuffle to the nearest wall so they couldn't lie on her and knock her over again. The cats, becoming lazier by the moment, simply rolled off when nudged and lay close to the warm friendly Emily, or sat on one of the closest bookshelves, all continuing the chorus of purring. The large Norwegian Forest Cat that was Red clambered into Emily's lap like a queen, her large brush-like tail seeing off all others who wanted that prestigious position. Emily found a soft-bristled brush, and began gently sweeping it from head to tail tip.

"I was thinking, she piped up eventually, "if this is how powerful the Anthropomorphiser is, as well as helping us for missions, maybe we could really use it as a weapon?"

"A weapon?" he replied, peering out from under the machine. There was a smudge of dirt on his nose.

"Yeah. Turn 'em all in'ta cats instead."

Adrian snorted with amusement, his face creasing up as he suddenly had images of a very pissed-off black cat with emerald eyes. "Oh dear, Emily…"

"Maybe we could distract them with tuna!" she chirped with a silly grin on her face. "Or maybe tuna laced with dynamite!"

Adrian facepalmed. These kids and their imaginations…

Then a wisp of chocolate-coloured fur drifted past and ticked his nose, causing him to sneeze and carefully-balanced part of the machine's interior to dislodge. He only just caught himself from swearing. He glanced over, seeing that the entire floor now had a new carpet of the stuff.

"You had to go and brush Red, didn't you?"

OoO

Adrian had already sent word to the many missions which were currently extant, telling them to hole up in a safe place, or rent a hotel room, until the issue was sorted. The first call back to the Library had come from Stephen, and Adrian answered with a cat in his arms, a couple of others curled up on the desk.

"Hey, what's going on? Everything here's sorted, Sue and all," he said through the screen in the Monitor Room. The Sue in question could be seen in the background, tied to a chair.

"That's good news. No, it's probably best you stay there for a while; I'll call you when it's safe to return," replied Adrian.

Stephen's voice turned urgent. "What's happened?"

"Nothing dangerous per se, just an annoyance…"

"Ohh…" Stephen had spotted the calico prowling Adrian's lap. "Did Rhia bring her cats into the Library again?"

"Stephen…" Adrian scooped up the cat and held her in the air. "This IS Rhia."

There was a moment of pause as he digested the news, and tried not to burst out laughing. "Seriously? Oh man, that's awesome."

"Heh. Yeah, it was a machine that malfunctioned in the tech labs. Thing is the machine's area effect is still very active – we're trying to fix it, but the pull for me to be a cat is very strong – " and at that moment, Adrian lost his hold and turned into a white cat, whom the calico leapt upon before jumping to the floor. The white cat sighed and turned back, shaking his head to Stephen's laughter. "See what I mean? Trust me, it's best you stay out there for the moment."

"All right, will do. Take pictures!"

OoO

"Meeooooww!"

"Mmrrroooww!

"Uhhh Adrian?"

"Meeoww…"

"What?"

"I think the cats are hungry…"

"All right, hold on…"

Adrian followed Emily away from the cats, of at least half were yowling for attention. By some miracle they managed to get into the kitchen without any of them entering too.

"Thank God we don't have Tyler around, I think he'd be trying to eat everything in the room by now…" He went to clean the oil and dirt off his hands, and Emily looked around for cat food. This was Kitchen One, which was much more now the generic pantry than anything else; Kitchen Two was Rhia's kitchen, where most people went to and at least three times bigger than this; Kitchen Three was the place of dusty and mouldy horror that nobody dared to enter. There was apparently a Kitchen Four somewhere, but that was more a Medieval roasting pit than anything else and hadn't been seen by the Society at all.

"What are we going to give the cats?" asked Emily, searching the cupboards.

"Protein, preferably," he said, drying his hands and joining the search. "Cats aren't like dogs, being able to eat anything, Emily; they're what's known as 'obligate carnivores'. They have to eat meat or similar."

"Robert mentioned to me once that he gave cats scrambled egg?" she said, pulling out a quarter-empty box of twenty-four eggs.

Adrian smirked. "He was brought up on a farm where they have a large colony of mousers. That's what you'd feed a sick cat or an elder kitten. This lot need something more substantial."

"Aha!" said Emily, finding what she'd been looking for and pulling out the huge sack of kibble. "I knew Rhia had left some of this here…"

She hauled it out and dumped it next to the table. She then scooped out a handful of the dry cat food, and placed it on a plate. Adrian eyed it with a sudden sense of suspicion.

"Will this do?"

"Um…"

"Try it."

"You try it."

"Nuh-uh. I'm not a cat."

"Aww…"

Adrian vanished and was replaced by the white self, the ribbon on his tail beginning to slip off. Emily seized it, and him, and wrestled the ribbon around his neck loosely. He wriggled, but settled down in front of the plate.

Slowly he sniffed the dry food. He recoiled.

"Go on, kitty…" she said, stroking the top of his head.

He pawed one piece out, and after a long hesitation, ate it.

"Well?"

The cat let out a squeak, and leapt off the table as if he had been electrocuted. There was a retching sound, and the table shuddered with a 'boink' from below as Adrian transformed back and hit his head on the underside. He crawled out, stood up, and tripped over a chair.

"Bleecchh! Eee-yuk!"

"No good then?"

He dived for the sink. "That stuff… tastes like barf, and soap, and mouldy fishskins, and gone-off custard…" He lifted from the tap, the lower half of his face dripping. "It's better used as a weapon than food!"

Emily was howling with laughter. "Okay, that's a no."

"Tuna. No cat knows how to refuse tuna."

Emily raised an eyebrow. "I only saw three tins in the cupboard," she said, retrieving them.

"Hmm. We might need to dig around in the freezer and cook some…"

"But what?"

"I think I have a plan," he said, pulling a few frying pans from yet another cupboard. "Go and fetch the two fussiest Agents, would you?"

Emily ventured down the corridors, spotting cats here and there curled up on bookshelves. Several had found one of the desks Adrian worked at and had made a nice home on top of his paperwork. Most of them, however, had remained in the room with the cushions and boxes. Most of them were also napping.

She tiptoed around the cats, some of whom half-woke enough to headbutt her foot or wrap a tail around her
ankle. She reached the large floor cushion where three cats slept, and took in the cute scene. Kitty-Louise was curled into a tight ball, nestled in one corner; kitty-Alice sprawled out on the dark starry fabric, with kitty-Robert snuggled up against her with one paw over her protectively.

Emily pulled out her camera and snapped a picture, before bending down and tickling the silver tabby. She woke up, disturbing kitty-Robert with her; Emily slid her arm under the cat and picked her up. Kitty-Robert sat up and meowed plaintively.

Kitty-Valerie lay comfortably on her side in a box, purring softly. Emily clucked at her from above, and she woke and rolled onto her back.

"Come on kitty," she said gently, watching the lightly-striped tail lift as the cat sprang gracefully out of the box. Kitty-Alice scrabbled in Emily's arms, slid free and jumped upon the ticked tabby; the two tussled for a moment, but purred and bumped heads.

Emily giggled, taking more pictures. She then withdrew a toy mouse on a string from her pocket, and dangled it in front of the two before running out the door. The two cats followed excitedly, and then the smell of food attracted them further. It was a miracle that none of the others followed, but Emily did hear a few meows and scratches from behind her.

The cats and the young girl entered the kitchen, and Adrian had prepared by placing several covered plates on the table. "Got them?" he asked. "Good. Sit them on the table, would you? It's time to test a few things."

Emily placed kitty-Alice, then kitty-Valerie on the table, and they sniffed some of the closest plates curiously.

The two that were still human grinned at each other, and presented the two fusspots with the first plates. On each was a small handful of kibble.

The effect was immediate. Neither cat would go near it; kitty-Valerie actually leapt off, and kitty-Alice hissed and batted both plates off the table before following.

A few moments had to be spent to catch both tabbies and to clean up the smashed china with a dustpan and brush. They then presented the second plates to the two cats: both contained a little tuna.

And of course, being fussy, both of them were struggling with their new cat instincts. Kitty-Valerie shrank away, but kitty-Alice sniffed around it and crouched down low.

"God, they're fussy," said Emily, before she realised she was talking to no-one in particular.

Adrian had vanished again, and the white cat padded across the table, eyes fixed intently on the lovely fish. The two girls looked at him, twitching lightly as if they wanted to defend their food; but they allowed him to steal a chunk before he jumped off the table.

"Hungry?" quipped Emily.

"Mmph. Sorry," he said with his mouth full.

"So the three cans will be empty pretty soon. Next?"

The third plates contained a small amount of white fish, lightly cooked. Kitty-Alice sniffed, licked, and ate a little chunk warily, before finishing it off. Kitty-Valerie, still fighting the cat instincts, only managed to get to the licking stage before she backed off. Emily ticked the back of her neck.

"Fair enough," said Adrian. "That's another good one. Just means a lot of light frying and tinfoil…we have to feed all the cats at the same time, so I'll need your help, Ems."

"Okay," she replied. "What about the last plates?"

"The control…" he said, lifting the lids and presenting the small amount of steaming chicken fillet to the two cats, who snapped them up quite happily.

The mission to get the cats fed was quite something, sourcing out almost every bit of chicken and fish in the fridge, the freezer and in other cold stores in the entire Library, cooking it gently and briefly and using one of those big wheeled multi-level portable trays to stack the numerous plates on.

As Adrian returned from another foray into a secret freezer, he passed the door to the basement. A muffled yowl distracted him, and pressing his ear to the locked door he could hear the mews and scratches of the Sues below. He sighed, having forgotten the Anthropomorphiser would have affected them too, and the steel cross-barred walls had grid holes big enough for a cat to jump through and escape their cells. Not that he blamed them, really, with the situation. He mentally counted how many were down there and added the number to how many more chunks of food he needed to warm up. He'd bring them dinner later.

Wheeling the full trays into the room with the cats stirred most of them into a loud frenzy. The pair worked quickly, hovering each plate over a cat who always moved beneath it when they tried to set it down, so quickly they learnt to dodge the plate to the side and slip it onto the floor. They had made sure there was plenty for all; the tuna was almost fought over but vanished before it got to scratches. The sound of quiet little 'chomp-chomp-chomps' replaced the loud meowing.

Adrian piled the last of the plates on a tray and began to head off to the basement. "Ems, get yourself something to eat too, then get back to that machine… 'kay?"

She sighed. "All right…"

When she returned with her sandwiches, the cats had eaten their fill and had dozed off again quite contentedly. All that is except for kitty-Louise, who was going round every single plate on the floor and hoovering up every leftover there might be, and licking them all clean afterwards.

"Silly kitty," said Emily, sitting on a chair to watch.

OoO

It all started so suddenly.

Emily had been underneath the machine, having finally stopped the transforming ray that for half an hour had stopped even Adrian from keeping a human form for more than ten seconds. She swore she was on the verge of getting the thing fixed…

But then, the happy meows had turned – almost in a single moment – to annoyed hisses and yowls. Then there was an almighty 'THUMP' as something collided with the side of the machine.

"Eeek!" Emily squeaked, scrabbling to roll out from under the machine, and ending up in the middle of a fight.

A large bunch of no less than five cats were facing off in the centre of the room. With a ferocious whack, the orange tabby scored a hit on a black self's nose and sent him spinning into the corner, before facing the other four and growling with his back arched. The wild tabby met his challenge.

Emily gasped, recognising the dazed cat as Willie… the brown tabby as Michael and the ginger as Gareth…

Kitty-Willie stood up, shook himself off, and jumped to stand in front of kitty-Inara. Kitty-Robert had already been ejected from the battle – which now was seeing two tabbies tussling with each other – with a bloody score mark down his nose, and had limped back over to the two girls on the floor cushion.

Emily dodged the main group, leapt over a black-and-white and a cinnamon smoke having a face-off, and went to shriek for Adrian.

"Emily? What's happened? Is the roof on fire? What?"

"They're fighting – "

And at that moment, kitty-Avak barrelled into Adrian's shins, and used his legs as a ladder. Kitty-Ben slunk away to a dark corner, that battle having ended in stalemate.

Adrian blinked in shock for just a moment. "Oh b – " he nearly swore. He struggled to remember which of the girls may have been that-time-of-the-month grouchy the day before. "They're all intact males aren't they! They're fighting over what they see as theirs…"

"But – they're not – ?"

"Two levels above being animal…we've got to stop this now!" Thrusting the cat into Emily's arms, Adrian transformed and plunged into the room himself.

He almost wished Val's team weren't busy at the time, as she was making a good attempt to break up the fighting, but to little avail. He noted three singletons, the Van pattern that was Dave and the blue ticked that was Tom, join kitty-Kyle up high on the bookshelves safe from the tussle below. He marched straight to the fight and hissed enough to swing their attention onto him… but this was a bad idea, for as he glanced round, he saw no less than four girl cats in his wake…

The white self vanished under a mess of black selfs, the ferocious orange tabby that was Gareth, a ginger-and-white and the boisterous wild tabby. But Emily returned just at that moment with a smaller version of her Supersoaker, filled with nothing but cold water; the first squirt caught kitty-Gareth full in the face, and he rolled backwards to be caught by the chocolate Red.

"Adrian!"

He transformed back, sporting several nasty scratches down his cheeks. "Ow… ow."

"You okay?"

"Fine. Good idea. We need to separate that fight, and I know how," he said, scooping up kitty-Rhia and holding her out of reach. The cats had already scattered at a large human suddenly appearing beneath them, but now the slim black kitty-Cristoph yowled and bounded forwards – only for Adrian to run to a room, dump the calico on a chair, make sure the cat had followed and pull the door to.

Emily caught on quick, picking up a random girl and lobbing them into a room like bait. Sometimes it failed, but most of the time the man whose cat mind demanded possession ran in after their female – or females; in several cases a cat sought to defend more than one girl, and would not go in unless their other was found, including kitty-Robert (with both Alice and Louise) and kitty-Michael (Claire and Miri). But most proudly, or most embarrassingly of all, was Adrian's 'harem' of four – Aster, Tash, Valerie and Phoenixia. They let those four remain in the hall with the three singletons. The doors were open enough to allow egress once they had all calmed down.

And at the thought of calming down, Adrian sank onto the starry floor cushion. The carpet of Red fur floated around the place and covered every surface. "Urrfff…I feel like Alice has been glomping me non-stop for an hour…"

"I can get you a drink?" said Emily, smiling.

"Oh you're a sweetheart. That'd be lovely…"

He caught her intention just a second too late, as she pumped the last of her Supersoaker water onto his face and ran off, cackling.

OoO

"Library? Library, come in."

Static.

"Bugger…" mumbled Ingrid to herself, before trying again. "Library?"

Her line was picked up at last, and she took in a deep breath to share her report, until she noticed the Monitor Room was empty.

Mental alarm bells started going off.

"Library! Anyone! I – "

She cut off as she noticed something strange. There at the bottom of the screen was a waving fluffy tail, silver with black stripes and a white tip…

"Hello?"

A slightly higher-pitched voice caught the attention of the owner of that tail, and suddenly, making Ingrid jump, a cat leapt up and pressed both front paws onto the screen.

Ingrid's mouth fell open as the silver tabby filled her communicator's screen. "Uh – the f…?"

"Meow!" Pleased by the noise, the cat continued pawing the screen. There were beeps and clicks from below as she stepped on the controls.

"Uhhh… hello, kitty," said Ingrid. The cat meowed in response, licking the screen where she could see Ingrid's nose. Ingrid smiled despite herself. "Here kitty kitty kitty, now what's going on?"

The tabby's head turned, ears twitching towards different sounds, and Ingrid caught sight of the name written on the ribbon round the cat's neck.

"Alice?"

Kitty-Alice glanced back to the screen at the sound of her name, pawing at the friendly shape she could see. "Miow?"

Ingrid could see more cats in the room beyond…

And then, just as Adrian burst through the doors – kitty-Alice stepped on controls enough to cut the feed all together.

"Oh bollocks!" Adrian cursed. He went over to the control panel, shooing the tabby off – not that she got very far, sliding into the nearest chair – and tried to get the feed back, but Ingrid tried a different tactic and sent a text message instead, updating him on her current progress. He sent a reply, reaffirming his warning to not return yet. He then turned, and scooped kitty-Alice into his arms.

"Right you, you've volunteered to be our guinea-pig," he said, carrying the silver tabby out of the Monitor Room.

Adrian met up with Emily back in the tech labs, where she was finally reattaching the control panel to the Anthropomorphiser. She smiled at him – he reciprocated the gesture, understanding that despite her overconfident mistake this morning, she had mostly been a great help to him in fixing the problem – and he approached, setting Alice down on a table.

"I think it's fixed! Should we test it now? Should I turn on the Change-back mode?"

"Emily, we can't just turn on the area-effect…"

"Oh, why?"

"Because…" Adrian nudged a pile of clothes on the floor with his foot. "…if you haven't noticed, Shapeshifter Baggage is ignored below Anthropomorphic level fifty-five. If we turn them all back in one fell swoop, they're all going to be stark naked, and they're not going to forgive me for it!"

"They're not going to forgive you anyway for having to look at their balls!"

Emily watched Adrian's mind change gear without the clutch and stall.

"Baaaaww… EMILY!"

"What?" she grinned, enjoying the nice shade of puce that his face was going. "S'true!"

"That's not – I had to – You shouldn't – you shouldn't know things like that, young lady!"

"You give me too little credit. I'm insulted." She crossed her arms and turned away, but her giggles let him know she wasn't serious.

"All right…" he sighed, going to tap the controls of the Anthropomorphiser and turning a dial to a low setting. "We're going to do it individually, starting with this one."

Kitty-Alice padded over and Emily tickled her white belly, the cat rolling over on the worktop. "Why not Tash?"

"Ummm." The blush returned to his cheeks.

"It is safe, yannow!"

"I think she'd, um, prefer it if we change her back elsewhere."

Emily grinned at him, but scooped up the tabby and set her on the floor. Adrian threw a couple of large blankets over the cat, then nodded to Emily and dodged out of the way.

At the thump of a big green button, a pink and yellow ray emanated from a slot in the side of the machine and hit the struggling bundle on the floor. For a moment nothing happened; but then there was a very human yelp and the small bundle became a large one.

"Yes!"

"It works!"

There was a muffled 'eek!" from within the blankets, and Alice's head popped out. She was holding the rest of the blankets tightly around her.

"Alice!" said Adrian. "Long story. Are you all right?"

"I'm naked!" she blurted. "I was a cat!"

"You remember? That's interesting. Look – uhh…"

Alice regained her senses a little more, glancing up at the two around her and her situation. She eased up to her feet, clutching her blankets to save her dignity. "I feel fine. Whoa, everything looks different…" Becoming slightly dizzy, she stumbled, and Adrian caught her.

"Careful." He sat her down on a bench. As Alice watched, Adrian showed her what they were doing by picking up the next nearest cat, the wild-colour tabby, and soon had the second cat under a jumble of blankets. Alice's eyes bugged as they turned on the ray again, and proved the machine had been fixed as a very red-faced Michael emerged from his bundle.

"Err…?"

"Michael? How're you doing?" Adrian asked.

"I… I feel fine, mostly… why am I starkers?"

"Sorry about that, but…" Adrian explained swiftly.

Alice and Michael glanced at each other, small embarrassed grins coming to their faces as they heard the story.

"If you two run and get dressed, we could use your help in turning back everyone else…"

"But why were we cats in the first place?" Alice asked.

Adrian glanced pointedly to Emily, and Alice and Michael's gazes followed…

"HEY!"

OoOoOoOoO

Some hours later, most of the agents who had been cats not too long ago had gathered in the Mod Sofa Lounge. The set of modular blue sofas had been rearranged at least twice, suiting the current conversation groups. Many were debating the events of the day, or giggling over what they could remember. Others had decided it was time for tea and had made sandwiches. Some were simply relaxing, bathing in the ambient light-heartedness.

Those who had missed the 'fun' had returned the moment Adrian had sent the all-clear, somewhat disappointed that they had missed all the bundles of fluff.

There was an exchange of Litwicks going on in one corner; the numbers of the little candle Pokémon had ballooned over the past few weeks, and Alice was happy to give her surplus to others who thought they were adorable. Inara, who had otherwise been devouring an entire bowl of fruit to forget the knowledge that her cat self had happily eaten a fish earlier in the day, squeaked when hers was placed in her hands; he cocked his head on one side and made immediately for Inara's sleeve, purple flame and all. Tash had two, one perched happily on her head. Louise was examining hers, and happy with her, placed her on the back of her chunk of sofa. Asuka glared closely at one set on the floor, not entirely sure what to make of the small creature.

Everyone stopped, however when Adrian opened the door to the Mod Sofa Lounge and let a young cat out.

Slinking round his legs, she sniffed her surroundings, her thin feathered tail lifting with interest, before padding lightly into the room. All eyes in the room, paused in mid-conversation, were upon her.

"Hey, look who's here!" cheered Harriet, kneeling with her arms outstretched. The kitten, recognising her, scurried towards her happily and was scooped up.

"Who on earth…?" began Louise, baffled. Her Litwick cheeped behind her. They had all been turned back to human for several hours now; the Anthropomorphiser had been fixed, surely?

The cat, with the appearance and playfulness of a yearling kitten, was a truly beautiful creature; a silver torbie point Balinese, or a longhair Siamese cat. She had stripes of black and silver with orange patches clear on her face, tail and legs, all fading to a pale ivory over the rest of her body. She gave a sweet little meow, high and melodious, wriggled out of Harriet's arms and leapt over to Louise, nuzzling round and round her legs. Almost instinctively, she bent down and stroked the cat's neck.

"Is this… Emily?"

"Yes, it is," said Tash. "Ain't she gorgeous?"

"How… what… what? Why is she a cat?"

"We've turned her into one for the day."

Louise's hand froze. "What?"

"This is discipline!" said Harriet, pointing into the air. "She has to learn that there are consequences to her actions, and that playing with the machines in the tech labs even if she's certain about them could be extremely dangerous. So for today and tonight, same length of time we had, she's gonna be a cat."

"But – you can't just go turning her into things!"

"This isn't Harry Potter, Lou," said Alice, clucking to the cat with a mousey-on-a-stick. Kitty-Emily seemed to have springs built into her legs, bounding over and furiously attempting to bat at the toy.

"She's just a child!"

"Oh Lou, this isn't anything bad, surely?" said Tash, attempting to explain. Kitty-Emily snagged the mouse and rolled around on the floor with it. "She's twelve years old, and we can't let her go fiddling with stuff willy-nilly and to hell with the consequences. She may be brilliant with our machines but her overconfidence in being able to fix anything could have been dangerous, so we need tempering there. It's just a small lesson, like what you have to do with kids to tell them where they've gone wrong."

"Yeah," said Alice, "remember my car crash last year served to make me a much more cautious driver, Lou?"

Kitty-Emily wove her way past the few hands which were petting her and returned to Louise, looking plaintively up at her and her meow the only sound in the room. Slowly her hand reached to the kitten's neck and tickled, her head moving into the touch. At a nudge, kitty-Emily leapt into Louise's lap and snuggled down, beginning to purr.

"It's okay, little one," she murmured.

"Lou… she seems to be enjoying your lap… we had to do something, otherwise she won't have learned. I was half-expecting her to ask me to use the Anthropomorphiser on her anyway," said Adrian.

"I'm just saying that there are other ways to discipline a child… I don't like it. Find a more orthodox way next time, guys."

Kitty-Emily yawned, wriggled, and settled down for a nap.

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Insert Pseudo-Deity Here

"Dare... I ask... what you're going to do with that?" Ben panted, one hand against the wall outside Michael's office.

"What, this?" Shirley asked, holding up a limp, bloody lung in a claw. "I'm gonna stick it with the rest of my collection."

Ben was one of the fastest members of the Society outside of users of techniques such as the Flash Step, but even so the Stu he'd been sent after had led him on a merry chase across half the city before he grew bored and opened a Plothole to escape. He might have gotten away too, if he hadn't felt the need to stop and toss off a dramatic one-liner, which gave Shirley enough time to sneak up behind him.

"Just how big has that thing gotten?"

Shirley smirked. "Do you really want to know?"

"No," Ben said, wiping sweat off his forehead with a sleeve and straightening up. "Right now all I want is a shower."

Shirley shrugged and trotted off, and for once Ben was too tired to try and figure out why he could never manage to see below her waistline. He groaned and started shambling towards his room. He had a sneaking suspicion his legs would be cramping up in the morning.

"Hey, handsome, how was your mission?" Lily came up beside him and gave him a quick peck on the cheek. She wrinkled her nose. "Ooh, you're all sweaty!"

Ben grimaced. "Yeah, but I got the Stu, so it's all good."

Lily smiled brightly. "In that case, I've got the perfect thing to celebrate!"

"Oh, really?" Ben couldn't remember the last time he'd seen Lily look so...happy. Before he could ponder the matter any further, Lily grabbed him by the arm and started pulling him away.

"Hey, go easy on the legs!" Ben laughed as he stumbled.

"Oh, hush, you," Lily said, sticking her tongue out. "You're not the only one who's been busy the past few hours."

"What's that supposed to-woah..."

What appeared to be the largest flat-screen the Library had to offer had been relocated into one of the smaller entertainment rooms, along with an over-stuffed couch and either two or three tables. Ben wasn't sure exactly how many tables had been wedged into the room, as they were all covered with snacks and junk food of every kind. Pizza, M&M's, cookies, various snack-sized candy bars, bottles of pop, nachos, tortilla chips and salsa all competed for space on the cramped table tops.

Lily couldn't help but giggle at the sound Ben's jaw made when it hit the floor. "And to top things off, I managed to track down your favorite movie series. She said as Ben tried to pick his jaw up by the floor. "Ocean's 11?" He laughed as he took the DVD from her. "OK, spill it, how in the name of Kai Hansen did you manage to get all this food?"

"Well, it wasn't easy," Lily admitted. "Tash had to order the pizza for me, and I now owe Rhia a big favor for making a lot of this, and I owe Adrian an even bigger favor for letting me have all this candy."

"And do I even want to know how you kept everyone away from this?"

Lily smiled sweetly. "Let me give you an example. I told Aster that if she came anywhere near this food, I would use Egg Bomb to rig every single anime and manga volume in the entire library to explode in her face the instant she touched it."

Ben blinked, "You know, I'm not quite sure how, but every now and then you end up scaring me worse than Shirley."

Lily giggled again. "I try..."

"Care to remind me again what I did to deserve this?" Ben asked, putting and arm around her.

Lily glanced away to hide the shadow that flitted across her face . "Nothing. Nothing at all..."

Ben raised an eyebrow, but Lily gave him a shove before he could say anything. "Go and shower, sweaty. I'll get these set up," she said, picking up the DVD's from the tabletop.

"OK," Ben laughed, "Be right back."

Lily waited until Ben's footsteps had faded before she let the smile slide from her face.

She owed a lot of people a lot of favors for helping her get this night set up, and if it fell through... she didn't know what she'd do...

Desperate to keep her mind occupied, Lily set about pointlessly rearranging the dishes on the table, focusing determinedly on the glut of snack food and nothing else.

"Ok, ready!" Ben said as he walked in a few minutes later, running his hand through his still-damp hair, trying to remove the scraggliness from the normally frizzy follicles.

He plopped himself down onto the couch next to Lily and popped a blue M&M into his mouth as she hit play on the remote and settled back next to her boyfriend. Ben wrapped an arm around her and pulled the former Mary-Sue closer to himself, tilting his head to inhale the scent of her vibrantly colored hair.

Lily smiled as she felt Ben's nose tickle the top of her head and snuggled closer to him. It looked like things were going to turn out perfectly after all...

Then Jess walked in and Lily's heart stopped.

"Hey, Ben?" She called, sticking her head around the door. "Can I ask you about-" she stopped dead mid-sentence as her gaze fell on the coffee tables straining under the weight of the food.

"What... where... how... who?" she sputtered, her mind overloading at the sheer quantity of junk food before her.

"Lily really outdid herself, huh?" Ben asked proudly.

"You put this together?" Jess asked, her eyes nearly bulging out of their sockets. "Oh, you're my new best friend now."

Lily smiled weakly as panic surged through her body like coffee out of Ben's floodgates. Oh dear god, please don't let her stay, please, I'll do anything, just don't let her-

"Want some?" Ben asked. Lily felt like crying.

"I wouldn't want to interrupt..." Jess said without taking her eyes off the food.

"You're not interrupting," Ben laughed, "I mean, it's not as if we can eat all of these by ourselves."

Jess kept staring at the pizza, wrestling with herself a moment longer before she finally gave in and almost dove at the table.

"So you wanted to ask me something?" Ben asked once Jess had finished inhaling her food.

"Oh, right," Jess said, sitting down on the other side of Ben, wiping her hands on her jeans and bending over to pick up several sheets of paper she'd dropped on the floor mid-lunge. As she did so, the back of her In Flames shirt slipped up, inadvertantly giving Ben a front-row view of the pentagram tattooed on her lower back. Ben's eyes widened for a second before he snapped his gaze back to stare fixedly at the TV screen, blushing.

Rage boiled up within Lily to join the cocktail of emotions swirling within her. It was all she could to keep from lunging at the keyboardist sitting on the other side of Ben.

Jess straightened up, oblivious to the anger she had just incited in Lily, and handed the papers to Ben. "I was wondering what you wanted to do about this song, do you want to move your solo until after the third bridge or do you want to leave it and let Valerie sing a cappela here?"

Ben removed his arm from around Lily to take the papers from his bandmate and soon lost himself in the world of guitar tabs and hastily scribbled lyrics.

Lily kept her unseeing gaze fixed on the TV screen as she set her jaw in an attempt to keep the tears at bay. After all the time and effort she had taken to prepare this evening, and Jess just had to show up and ruin it. Her hands curled into fists. All she wanted was a sliver of time to be alone with her boyfriend. Was that really so much to ask?

It was only when the DVD player beeped that Lily returned to reality and realized that the movie had run it's course and was now back at the main menu. She looked over at Ben and Jess only to see that they had fallen asleep leaning against each other, Ben's head resting on Jess' head which was in turn nestled into his shoulder, papers strewn around them.

Lily's defences, which had wavered for so long, finally crumbled. She fled the room, barely able make out where she was going through the haze of tears, but the next thing she knew she was fumbling with the door to her room. Slamming the door shut behind her, the sobbing girl threw herself onto her bed and buried her face into her pillow. It was over. Everything she'd done, everything she'd tried, it was all for nothing. For just a few precious seconds back there, everything was going to be OK, but then...

A soft knock sounded at the door. "Go away!" Lily yelled, her voice breaking along with her heart.

"...Lily?"

Lily raised her tear-stained face from the pillow. It was Avak.

"Is... e-everything alright?"

From the sound of his voice, Avak was clearly worried and sounded more than a little scared. Rolling out of bed, Lily opened the door. Avak's worried eyes widened even further at the sight of Lily's miserable, tear-stained face.

"What happened?"

Lily wanted to know the answer to that too. Just where had she gone wrong? What had changed between herself and Ben to make him start treating her like this?

She didn't know. Godamnit, she didn't know.

She opened her mouth to reply, but all that emerged was a strangled sob. She threw her arms around Avak and buried her head into his shoulder, the tears returning.

Avak was scared and confused. For one thing, why was Lily crying? And for another, why had she put her arms around him like this? He'd seen a few other people around the Library do similar things to each other, but they always seemed to be happy when they did it, so why wasn't Lily? He wasn't sure how to respond. Slowly, cautiously, he gently put his own arms around Lily which only seemed to make her cry even harder. Avak started to release Lily, only to have her squeeze him even tighter and release a sobbing "Don't."

Dutifully, Avak wrapped his arms back around her trembling form, holding her close to himself. Lily cried for what seemed like an eternity, but eventually, there were no tears left to shed.

"...what happened?" Avak asked once several seconds had passed, their arms still around each other.

Lily took a shuddering breath, struggling to maintain her wavering composure. "B-Ben...he and Jess...they-" she was unable to finish the sentence, burying her face in his shoulder again.

"Are you alright?" Avak asked, concerned as Lily raised her head. She sniffed and nodded, wiping the tears from her eyes."...Thank you, Avak," She said, looking up into his eyes, cupping his cheek in her hand. "You're a good friend."

Avak stared into Lily's bright green eyes, still shining with unshed tears. He started to say something, but before he knew what was happening, Lily had pressed her lips against his and held them there. Avak froze, his heart stopping as his eyes widened in shock, unsure how to respond to this strange action from Lily. Before he could decide, Lily broke from his embrace and ran back into her room, slamming the door behind her.

Avak stared blankly at the door for a moment, but the wood paneling offered no explinations. His head was spinning and he raised a hand to his mouth, touching his still tingling lips. Slowly, he turned and walked back to his room, just as worried and confused as ever. What was going on?

On the other side of the door, Lily sank to the floor, her head in her hands. Her eyes burned, but no tears came. What had she done? A sob shook her shoulders.

Just when she thought things couldn't get any worse...

-

I stare into your eyes
I don't like what I see
Whoever's in your head right now
It certainly isn't me

Lily stared down at the poem she'd written, the words staring back up at her from the ruled sheet of paper. She sighed, crumpling the poem up and letting it fall from her listless fingers back onto the table in front of her. She'd never been particularly creative, but after the events of last night, she desperately needed some sort of an outlet.

She'd remained in bed for as long as her conscience would allow, but except to grab a late breakfast, she hadn't left her room at all; the last thing she wanted was to see anyone, least of all Ben or Avak. There was no excusing what Ben was doing to her, true, but there was no justifying her actions last night either. Why had she kissed Avak? What had she been thinking? Now things were more complicated than ever. Lily buried her head in her hands. Try as she might, she couldn't see any way out of this mess...

The vibration of her communicator jolted her out of her misery. She'd forgotten to turn the device off. She considered ignoring whoever it was that was trying to contact her, but decided against it. She pulled the device out of her pocket and looked at it. It was Michael.

"Hello?"

"We've got him!" Michael proclaimed in way of greeting. "Matthew's popped up in a Defense of the Ancients rip-off called Demigod. Get down here and I'll fill you in!"

Lily squared her shoulders as Michael cut the connection. Right. Enough feeling sorry for herself. She was an Agent of the Anti-Cliche and Mary Sue Elimination Society and she had a duty to accomplish. She shoved the crumpled-up poem into a pocket and strode out the door purposefully. Matthew was not going to escape from her this time.

-

"This is all we know about Demigod," Matthew said, handing Lily a folder. "From what we can tell, it's billed as an action/strategy type game, where players control one of eight Demigods in an attempt to defeat the other team or accomplish certain objectives."

"What about the plot?" Lily asked, flipping a page over to scan the other side.

"There's not much of it," Matthew admitted. "Apparently a god got kicked out of the club, and now a bunch of his illegitamte children are fighting in a tournament to see who gets to take his place."

"You said there were eight demigods?"

Michael nodded, handing her another sheet of paper that detailed the eight player characters. "There are two types of them. Assassin Demigods are solo, front-line fighters. General Demigods are weaker, but can summon small armies to fight for them. They've been divided into The Forces of Light, and The Forces of Darkness. Fourtunately, or mabye unfortunately, you'll only have to worry about half of them."

Lily looked up from the dossier questioningly.

"Matthew killed all four of the Light Demigods when he arrived," Michael explained. He sighed. "Normally, that'd be a bad thing, but if it means you don't have to fight them," he shrugged before continuing.

"I don't need to tell you how importaint it is that we catch Matthew here," Michael said, folding his arms. "Avalon Code is still on lock-down, since Matthew had The Book of Prophecy, and we've had to put a freeze on Aria of Sorrow as well, since he's stolen the all the Souls in Dracula's castle. He needs to be stopped now, before he can do any more damage."

Lily nodded, handing the folder back to Matthew. "I won't let him escape this time," she vowed.

"I know you won't. That's why I'm sending Avak with you."

Lily flinched. "Avak? Can't I take someone else?" she asked desperately.

"He already proved himself to be a competent fighter during your mission to The One, didn't he? Besides we need more data on him, and you'll need the help!"

Lily felt as though she'd been stabbed in the stomach. "Help? I-"

"You were nearly killed the past two times you faced Matthew, and he's only gotten stronger since. You'll need all the backup you can get." Michael said bluntly and Lily lowered her head.

So... I'm not the only one who thinks I'm weak...

"I understand," she said at last, raising her head. "I'll get Avak and leave immediately."

-

Avak sighed as he closed the book and put it down on the desk, the weighty tome emitting a soft thump as it came to rest.

"Finished?" Valerie asked, looking up from her work.

Avak shook his head silently.

Valerie frowned. Avak had been acting strange all day. "Is something wrong?"

Avak just shrugged. "Can't concentrate."

Valerie's frown deepened, but she returned her attention to Rhia's bloody finger."I've put some iodine and rubbing alcohol on it," the healer said, giving the bandage a final wrap. "Just try not to bend it too much and it should be fine."

"OK," Rhia replied, wiggling the digit experimentally. "It didn't look too serious, but I thought I should come see you anyway."

"It's a good thing you did," Valerie commented, getting up and moving to a nearby sink to wash her hands. "I can't even imagine what must build up on those knives of yours in the cooking process."

Avak had been staring off into space for several seconds, but a knock on the door snapped back to reality.

"Hey, is Avak in here?" Lily asked, poking her head in.

"He's over here," Valerie said, nodding towards the bassist, who stood as Lily walked into the room.

"Hey, Lily," Rhia greeted her, "How'd it go last night?"

"Last night?"

"With Ben?" Rhia prompted. "I helped you get all that food ready?"

"Oh..." A shadow passed over Lily's face. "Fine..."

Rhia frowned, but before she could press for details, Lily seemed to recover, "Matthew's back," she said. "I'm getting ready to go after him, but Michael wants me to take Avak with me." Lily explained, and the wheels in Valerie's head started turning.

Lily hadn't been herself for a long while, and now Avak was acting strangely as well. In fact, Lily hadn't even looked at Avak since she came in, choosing to keep her eyes downcast instead. She'd sounded less than thrilled about having to take Avak with her on the mission as well.

"You ready?" Lily asked Avak, who nodded, picking Abraxis up from where it leaned against his chair, slinging it across his shoulders.

"Good luck, and be careful, you two," Valerie said as the two Agents headed out the door, receiving a half-hearted smile from Lily in return. "We'll try..."

Valerie and Rhia shared a look as the door closed.

-

Once they were out the door, Lily started down the hallway purposefully without a backwards glance. Avak hesitated for a moment, then hurried after her. "Lily?"

"What?" Lily asked without breaking stride or looking back.

Avak bit his lip, "Um... I was just... I was wondering... I-I mean..." He stopped walking. "Are you alright?"

Lily stopped mid-stride as well, her back still to Avak, who took this as a sign to continue. "I mean... last night you were-"

"Avak." Lily cut him off, and for the first time, there was a catch in her voice. "I...I can't do this right now," she said staring at the floor, her hands curled into shaking fists. "Let's just finish this misson, and I promise we'll talk about what happened last night when we get back. I promise. Please..."

Avak was silent for a moment, staring at the girl in front of him for a long second. Then he nodded. "OK." He said quietly.

"Good," Lily straightened her shoulders and raised her head. "C'mon. We've got a job to do..."

-

"The Third Sequel."

"The Ghost Of Man?"

"Three of us are girls!"

"Oh. Right."

"Requiem?"

"Cool, but done to death."

"Grrrrrr..."

"Oops. Sorry, Shirley."

"Sledgehammer?"

"Sounds too much like Hammerfall."

"I still want to do something literary-based."

"Hey, Valerie? What's the highest number in the Dewey Decimal system?"

"1000.0."

"Meh, too boring."

"How about The Dead Librarians?"

"That's not funny, Shirley!"

"Bite me," the Clichè Stick growled, chewing on a splinter left over from one of her drumsticks. "We've been at this for hours now and we still don't have a name for our band!"

"I think Shirley has a point," Valerie said, getting up from her seat and looking around the dingy room. "There's no point in trying to force anything here. We'll come up with a name eventually." Valerie wondered for the umpteenth time why Ben insisted on playing in this cramped, dusty space. He had said something before about the tradition of all bands starting out in their garages and working their way up, but Valerie really didn't see how that made much sense.

"Guess you're right..." Ben muttered, slinging Bahamut across his back and standing as well. "By the way, where's Avak? I haven't seen him all day."

"Lily stopped by the med ward earlier," Valerie explained. "Matthew's back, and she needed his help."

Ben chuckled. "Those two on a mission together? Matthew doesn't stand a chance."

-

There was a clank as the last solider's helmeted head was involuntarily detached from his spinal cord and tossed uncerimoniously to the ground.

The floor of the throne room of the Citadel of Darkness was covered in dead bodies. The forms of soldiers, archers and even a winged angel or two lay strewn around the room, some of which were still smoking.

The Citadel's acted as strongholds for either team on the various game maps that acted as the battlegrounds of Demigod. An impossibly high mass of onyx stone, the Citadel of Darkness had been lined with streams of red jewels that glowed with a menacing light from within.

Lily contemptuously kicked the now headless corpse to the ground and turned to face Matthew.

"It's over, Slaymaker," She panted, her steely gaze unwavering.

Avak stood several feet behind her, panting as well. Blood dripped off Abraxis and stained his shirt, which was ripped and torn in several places.

Matthew sneered from the top of the dais where he sat on an onyx throne. He was still wearing the black Shadow Knight armor he'd stolen in the Castlevania fandom, the diamond blade of Claimh Solais reflecting the red light of the gems lining the stone columns of the throne room.

"You really think so?" He asked, "I don't..."

There was a sinister chuckle and all color drained from Avak's face as four dark figures materialized from the shadows of the throne room.

"You may have dispatched my footsoldiers," Matthew said smugly, leaning back on the throne, crossing his legs and steepling his fingers. "But let's see how you fare against the Demigods of Darkness."

He snapped his fingers and the next few seconds bluured.

The demonic monster who seemed to be inside out, with both it's black, spiny bones and gooey internal organs on the outside, struck first, pouncing at Avak. Avak spun out of the way, aided by the force of Abraxis' swing and drove the axe into the chest of the monster.

The Unclean Beast roared in pain, rearing back as viscus green fluid began to pour from the wound. Avak yanked Abraxis from the wound and hastily stepped back, avoiding the pool of bubbling liquid. Raising Abraxis above his head, he brought the axe down on the neck of the beast as it fell back onto all fours, severing it's head from it's body. The Unclean Beast's body writhed for a moment, before exploding into a geyser of sickly-looking bodily fluids that bubbled and hissed menacingly.

He turned to help Lily, but caught a blur of movement at the very corner of his eye and barely had time to duck as Lord Erebus flashed past him, fangs mere centemeters from his neck.

The vampire snarled as it spun and lunged at Avak again, but this time Avak was ready for him. He swung Abraxis with all his might, catching Erebus in mid-air, the axe-head smashing through the vampire's ornate armor and embedding deep into Erebus' chest. In an extension of the same movement, Avak swept Erebus off his feet and carried him through the air on the battle-axe, slamming him into the pool left by the Unclean Beast.

The vampire screamed and writhed as the acidid fluid ate through his armor and skin. He clawed desperately, trying to free himself, but Avak kept him pinned to the ground with Abraxis. Within seconds there was nothing left but charred bones.

Lily had instinctively turned to face Avak when the Unclean Beast pounced at him, but before she could take a breath, something snaked around her ankle, jerking her roughly into the air by her foot. The world spun for a moment, and when it stopped, Lily found herself hanging upside down, held by a vine.

"My..." A voice purred. "What a tasty little morsel we have here."

An upside down figure swung into view, revealing the form of The Queen of Thorns. The Queen, a wicked fairy dressed only in vines that barely served to protect her modesty, licked her lips. "Yours is a life force I will enjoy consuming." The giant beetles who carried her rose chariot clacked their mandables menacingly.

"Torch Bearer!" The Queen called out in a sing-song voice. "Would you mind roasting this peice of meat for me?"

"With pleasure," a grating voice replied, and Lily twisted herself around just in time to see an armored sorcerer, covered in flames, raise his staff and point it at her. "Any last words?" the twisted mage rasped.

Lily snarled in response. "Ice Blow!" There was a hideous cracking sound as the spear of ice impaled both the beetles and the Queen of Thorns, who screamed as she fell There was a bright flash of light, accompanied by a cry of "Wild Line!", as the over-sized blade sliced through the vine holding Lily, who rotated in mid-air, swinging her sword along with her spin and separating the Torch Bearer's torso from his legs in a single blow.

The Wild Line blade exploded into motes of light as Lily's feet hit the ground, a second before the corpses of The Queen of Thorns and the Torch Bearer.

Lily turned back to face Matthew as Avak ran over to stand beside her, his grasp on Abraxis unyeilding.

"It's over, Matthew," Lily repeated, her eyes hard.

Matthew was unfazed. "Very impressive," he sneered, "but you forget, I've got The Book of Prophecy!" He flourished the tome. "As long as I've got this, I've got an endless, invincible army at my command!" He yanked the book open and slammed a palm down onto the page. "You may've been able to defeat four Demigods without much trouble," he said as a nexus of black energy erupted from the pages and began to play about the book. "but let's see how well you fare against ten thousand of them!"

The room grew dark as the Citadel began to shake. A great roar filled the room as huge chunks of stone fell from the impossibly high ceiling, falling thousands of feet to shatter on the gilded floor.

Lily tried to shout something to Avak, but her voice was carried away in the din. Avak sounded a wordless cry and charged the dais, raising Abraxis above his head. Matthew snarled and yanked Chlaim Solais from it's place on his back and moved to meet him.

Lily raised her hand to intervene, but before any of the three combatants could land a blow, the entire back wall of the citadel exploded inwards. The room spun as Avak was knocked across the room, rolling several times before he came to a stop against a mess of fallen stone. Fireworks exploded behind Lily's eyes as she was knocked over, her head colliding with the ground.

It took Lily several seconds to recover, but she gritted her teeth and forced herself to her feet and looked around. Avak was already back up and hurrying over to join her. She paused when she saw Matthew struggling back to his feet himself, leaning against a pillar for support.

He wasn't the one who did that... so then...

She turned back to the dais and froze. The black throne had been toppled over, and a gaping hole had been blasted in the wall, revealing the game map beyond, but that wasn't what caught her attention.

A young man leaned against the throne, flipping madly through The Book of Prophecy, his eyes darting back and forth at dizzying speeds. His appearance was unremarkable, dressed in jeans and a wrinkled Bioshock T-shirt, with messy brown hair and blue eyes, but Lily recognized him from the Society's monitors...

He glanced up from The Book of Prophecy and his eyes lit up. "Hey! What's up? How's it going! You're Lily, right? I've heard a lot about you! You're on the other side now, huh? Sweet!"

"W-who's he?" Lily almost jumped at the sound of Avak's voice. Her mind had all but shut down in fear at the sight of the newcomer and she had forgotten all about Avak.

"Dude! Avak! You're the noob, right? Nice to meet ya!" He started hopping from one foot to the other. "Oh, man, this is gonna be great! All we need now is-!"

"Who're you!" Matthew yelled, his eyes flaming.

"Who, me? I'm Passion. I'm a Sovereign. Pretty sweet, huh?"

Matthew didn't seem fazed by the newcomer's proclimation. "Give me back The Book of Prophecy!"

"What, this?" Passion asked, gesturing carelessly with the book. "Why do you even want it? It's not as if it's that great a-"

He was cut short as a snarling Matthew launched himself at him, Chlaim Solais glittering red in the malevolent light of the Cidatel. In a flash, the Passion backhanded Matthew with the Book of Prophecy, sending him flying. Matthew hit the floor hard and slid several feet from the force of the blow, his black armor sending up showers of sparks as it grated on the stone floor.

"Dude! Not cool!" Passion protested, sounting rather petulant.

Meanwhile, Lily's mind was racing. Why on earth had a Sovereign showed up here? He didn't seem interested in The Book of Prophecy, so what was he after? No, that didn't matter. She had to get herself and Avak away from here now.

Avak, who was staring slack-jawed at Passion, jumped when Lily hissed his name quietly. "Avak! Your Plothole Generator! Use it! Now!" It took a moment for the message to sink into Avak's stunned brain, but once it did, he dutifully pulled out the raygun device and fired.

The sound of space-time ripping caused Passion's head to spin around. "Hey!" he yelled, snapping his fingers.

Avak yelped as the Plothole Generator started sparking and dropped it to the flood a second before it melted into a pile of slag, the Plothole fizzing out of existence.

"C'mon, don't run away just yet," Passion pouted, "We haven't even started playing yet." he looked from Matthew to the Agents, "We just need one more player..." He glanced up towards the ceiling and his face lit up. "Ah!"

There was a blur as Sovereign flash-stepped away, then blurred back into sight a split-second later, holding a wildly struggling Holly, who was screaming at the top of their lungs.

"Look what I found in the Finger of God!" Passion proclaimed proudly over Holly's shrieks.

Lily paled. The Finger of God was an immensely powerful energy cannon located at the top of Citadels to repel attackers. If either she or Avak had even come close to defeating Matthew, Holly would've annihilated the both of them before they could blink.

"There," Passion said, as he set the Sue down on the ground, sounding pleased with himself. "Now the teams are even!" No sooner had Holly's feet hit the ground than she fled to stand beside Matthew, glaring at Passion.

The Sovereign looked around, beaming, only to find a combination of fearful, distrustful and angry expressions facing him.

"What do you want?" Lily asked warily, keeping her gaze fixed on the Sovereign.

"I just wanna play a game!"

"We aren't interested in your little games!" Matthew snarled.

"But you don't even know what it is!" Passion pouted, "C'mon! It won't take that long, I promise! Watch!"

Before anyone could respond, Passion snapped his finger and the next thing they knew the Cidatel had vanished and the two agents and Sues found themselves outside. Lily whirled around assessing their surroundings, while Avak gaped.

This is the Mandala map... Lily realized, turning in a circle. Mandala consisted of a number of blue stone rings nestled inside one another and connected by small bridges.

"OK! We're going to play Capture the Flag!" Passion announced. "Which ever team brings the most flags back to the middle, wins! Go!" Without further ado, the Sovereign shot up into the sky and was quickly out of sight.

The Agents and Sues looked at each other, stunned for a breif moment, then, as one, turned and sprinted in opposite directions.

"He wants us to collect flags?" Avak puffed as he ran beside Lily towards the next outer ring.

"Flags are a way of marking territory in this game," Lily explained, her mind mapping out the area and calculating the fastest way to reach the most flags. "Controlling them nets you bonuses like extra experence or reduced cool-down times for skills."

"Oh..."

Lily stopped abruptly as they reached the first ring, "You go one way, I go the other," she ordered. "We can cover more ground that way."

Avak hesitated, "But..."

"Just go!" Lily urged, before turning and runnning down the ring.

Avak hesitated before turning and doing the same.

Lily found the first flag right where she thought it would be, flapping idly in the wind. She considered trying to pull it from the ground, pole and all, but decided against it. She had a lot of ground to cover and trying to lug a pole twice her size would only slow her down.

"Live Slow, Die Fast!" She yelled, ripping the flag from the pole with the telekinetic Pin. Balling the smooth fabric up in her fist, she struck out for the next flag. Passion hadn't given them any time limit, but she was sure he was watching...

-

"Dammit!" Matthew swore, spinning in a circle.

"What?" Holly demanded, "C'mon! We've got to keep moving!"

"I know!" Matthew snapped, "I just don't know where the next flag is!"

"What? C'mon, use your Peeping Eye Soul!"

"I am! But this map is huge!"

"Well, think of something!"

"I'm trying! Dammit!" Matthew swore again, slamming a fist against a plate-armored thigh. "We shouldn't have to put up with this! We're Sues, just like him!" he jabbed a finger at the sky.

"But we're not Sovereigns, he is!" Holly pointed out.

"He's still just one person," Matthew snorted.

"He still managed to send you flying, didn't he?"

"He got lucky," Matthew waved her aside. "Besides I won't be the one taking him on this time."

Holly raised an eyebrow.

"You remember where you dumped the bodies of those Light Demigods we killed when get got here?"

Holly frowed. "I think so... why?"

Matthew tossed her The Book of Prophecy. "I trust you know what to do with this?"

Holly nodded. "But what are you going to be doing?"

Matthew grinned wickedly.

"I'm going to go shopping."

-

Lily's teeth were aching. She'd been running almost non-stop for nearly a half-hour, her legs tingling from the vibrations of running on stone. Her clothes were soaked with sweat, but there were several flags clenched in her fists, and she was nearly back to the center of the map .

"-ily! Lily!"

Blinking the sweat from her eyes, Lily turned. Avak was jogging up to her, carrying a number of flags, poles and all, resting against his shoulder. He wasn't breathing as hard as she was, but he hadn't obtained as many flags either.

"You OK?" Avak asked, letting the butt of his flagpoles slide to the ground. "Where are your flags?"

"...here," Lily panted, holding up a hand to show him the silver fabric clenched within.

"Oh," Avak replied, glancing up at his own flags, obviously never even having considered that.

"Come on," Lily said, wiping the sweat from her forehead. "Let's get this over with..."

Passion was hopping from one foot to the other, balancing precariously on the edge of the ring when Lly and Avak arrived.

"...58... 59... 60!"

The hyperactive Sovereign beamed at them as they approached, carrying their flags. "Just in time! If you hadn't made it back before now, I would've tracked you down and killed you!"

Avak paled, "You never told us that!"

Passion grinned, "Just because you don't know the rules doesn't mean they don't exist. Now then! Let's go ahead and tally up how many flag's you've gotten before those other-" He paused, frowning, and looked down at the crossbow bolt that had suddenly sprouted out of his chest. He glanced back up at Avak and Lily, confusion written all over his face, before falling backwards and tumbling over the edge of the ring into the abyss beyond.

Avak gaped, dumbfounded, at the space where Passion had stood only moments before, but Lily was already on the move. "Get down!" She barked, teleporting over to him with Top Gear and tackling him to the ground, knocking the flags from his hands. There was a zipping noise as two more crossbow bolts snapped by overhead, one of which ripped a hole in one of Avak's flags as he fell.

"Aww... I missed," A deep voice said in dissapointment.

"It's OK, Regulus," Holly replied, and even from where she fell, Lily could hear the smirk on her face. "You've have plenty of opportunities to shoot them later."

"Like hell he will," Matthew growled as Lily and Avak pulled themselves to their feet, "She is mine. You can do what you want with that other one."

Matthew and Holly stood several feet away, flanked on either side by the Demigods of the Forces of Light.

"Wha-what are they doing?" Avak asked, paling.

"Isn't it obvious?" Holly giggled, waving The Book of Prophecy.

"We originally killed all of them when we initially arrived here," Matthew explained, "We didn't think we'd need them, but circumstances changed."

"Matthew... do you have any idea what you've done?" Lily hissed, clenching her fists.

"Of course I do," Matthew snorted. "I removed an obstacle that was in my path, just like I'm about to do to you."

"The other Sovereigns won't let you get away with this!"

"Oh, please," Holly scoffed. "If they all go down as easy as Passion did, they can't be much of a threat,"

"Are you ready for Round 3, Bella?" Matthew asked, pulling Chlaim Solais off his back. "Don't think things are going to turn out the same way they did last time. Holly, keep that other one out of our way."

With that, he launched himself at Lily, swinging Chlaim Solais. Flicking her wrists, Lily activated two pins simeltaneously, warping out of the path of Chlaim Solais with Top Gear, and manifesting a jagged icicle directly in Matthew's path. Matthew rotated in mid-air, planting a foot on the icicle and launching himself off it and towards Lily again.

"Wild Line!" There was a flash of light as the sword flared to life in Lily's hands just before the Chlaim Solais connected with it. Lily gritted her teeth as Matthew pressed his sword against hers with all his strength; she could feel the Wild Line starting to give way. She threw herself to one side as the energy sword finally dissipated, causing Matthew to stumble forward. "Excalibur!" Lily shouted, firing a blast of lightning at the side of Matthew's head.

The Stu gave his sword a contemptuous flick, batting the lightning aside. The bolt slammed into the ground, breaking the rock and sending chunks of stone up into the air. "Live Slow, Die Fast!" Lily cried, thinking quickly, and sent one of the rocks flying towards Matthew.

Matthew lashed out with a hand, grabbing the rock from mid-air and hurling it back at Lily before she could react. The rock struck her in the forehead, causing an explosion of pain to blossom in her forehead, blinding her.

"You don't get it," Matthew sneered as Lily stumbled backwards and fell. "You see this?" He asked, holding up a fist. Lily squinted through the haze of pain, barely able to make out a glitter of gold on Matthew's finger. "It's the All Father's Ring. You should know what that means."

Somewhere in the back of Lily's mind, she did. The All Father's Ring was an extremely expensive artifact that boosted the stats of the wearer to untouchable levels.

"You can't beat me now," Matthew continued as Lily staggered to her feet. "I'm not just saying that out of pride, or boasting either. It's a fact now. You. Can't. Beat me."

"Mabye not," Lily gritted around the pain in her head, "But I'm going to try."

-

Avak was gasping for breath, gripping Abraxis so tightly his knuckles had gone white, the edges of the fretboard digging into his skin. His mouth had gone dry and he was frozen to the spot, his eyes fixed on the giant snow leopard that crouched several feet away, musles tensed, ready to pounce. The relatively delicate girl on the snow leopard's back twirled a harpoon in one hand, eyeing her prey.

Holly giggled as Regulus' finger tightened on his ridiculously large crossbow. "Settle down boy, let Sedna have her turn."

A rumble came from a figure clad in armor whose bulk rivaled Regulus's crossbow in terms of ridiculous. "I see no need to engage in such frivoloties when there are enemies to your person who are to be crushed."

"We've got him surrounded, Oak." Holly said dismissively. "After all, it's not as if he was a threat to begin with." She sighed as Avak thew himself to one side, the claws of Sedna's snow leopard missing him by a hair yet again. "This is getting old though," She pulled out the Book of Prophecy, flipping to the healer's page in the ominpotent tome. "Seeeedna~! I'm going to increase your speed, K?"

Sedna nodded, turning her mount back to face the shaking Avak once again. "My thanks, Lady Holly!"

"Now go get him!" The Sue cheered, slamming the book closed.

The snow leopard's eyes narrowed, and that was all the warning Avak needed, he thew himself flat to the ground, the underfur of the giant cat passing less than a foot above his face as it flew over him. Avak scrambled desperately to his feet, and turned ready to dodge again. What he saw made his blood run cold.

Sedna and her mount had underestimated the immense boost The Book of Prophecy had granted them. Sedna dropped her harpoon, grabbing onto her mounts fur with all her might. The leopard's claws raked along the stone, sending up showers of sparks as the two of them were sent skidding uncontrollably across the ring.

They're not going to be able to stop in time.

No sooner had the thought flashed through Avak's mind than Regulus opened his mouth to shout a warning, but it was too late.

The center ring of Mandala was less than 100 feet across. At the rate Sedna and the snow leopard were moving, they slid across the ring in an instant and were sent flying over the side.

Sedna's anguished scream as she was tossed into empty space and vanished stabbed straight through the heart of everyone who heard it. Then, there was silence.

Avak's mind was racing. That hadn't just happened, had it? There was no way. The way she fell looked fake! There had to be-

Regulus' anguished roar snapped Avak around just in time to see the wingless angel raise his crossbow and fire.

Avak stumbled backwards, the action saving his life as the crossbow bolt struck Abraxis and ricoched off, the force of the blow scratching the bass' paint and knocking Avak to the ground. His feet slid uselessly against the smooth stone platform as he tried to stand, when a second bolt slammed into the ground next to him, making him yelp.

"YOU BASTARD!" The sniper screamed, already cocking his crossbow for another shot. Avak started to scramble to his feet, only to be yanked back down to the ground by an invisible force. Twisting around desperately, he quickly located the source of his impediment. The second crossbow bolt that had missed him, hadn't missed his shirt, and had pinned it to the ground.

Avak grabbed at what little of the bolt remained exposed, trying to free himself, when a shadow fell over him.

If there was any moisture left in Avak's mouth after the events of the last five minutes, it evaporated now. He shuddered at the touch of the deathly cold steel of Regulus' crossbow against his forehead. He wanted to shut his eyes, but they refused, fixed on Death before them.

"End of the line." Regulus growled.

There was a creak as his finger tightened on the crossbow's trigger.

Avak's lungs contracted involuntarily, but his scream was drowned out as the platform underneath Regulus exploded and the form of an enraged Passion blasted up through the stone.

"YOU CHEATERS!"

The furious Sovereign grabbed Regulus and rocketed into the air, taking the stunned Demigod with him.

Avak had no idea what was going on, but his body didn't allow his mind time to contemplate the situation. His hand grabbed Abraxis and hacked wildly at his shirt, ripping the fabric to get free. No sooner had he regained his balance, however, than a shadow fell across him.

"To the wicked, Justice," Oak intoned, raising his axe high over his head.

Avak threw himself to one side, barely avoiding the axe as it smashed into the ground. With a growl, Oak ripped the weapon from it's crater and swung at Avak again, forcing the Society Agent to roll out of the way to avoid being split in half. Rising, Avak struggled to regain his balance, but dodging another swipe from Oak knocked him off his equilibrium entirely.

Avak started to stumble backwards, only to be knocked off his feet entirely as the shaft of Oak's axe caught him in the stomach. Reflexively, Avak grabbed onto the pole, holding on for dear life. Before either of them could react, the momentum from the swing sent Avak crashing into Oak, causing the smaller combatant to reel from the impact. Stumbling backwards, he flailed about blindly, grabbing onto the first object his waving hands found; in this case, Oak's weapon arm.

"Get off!" The general Demigod roared, raising the arm high into the air and smashing it into the ground.

The blow almost knocked Avak senseless, but he still didn't let go. He couldn't. He had reached his limit. He was exhausted from running for his life for the past fifteen minutes, and terrified out of his mind. His grip on Oak's arm tightened. He didn't want to die, he didn't want to die he didn't want to diehedidn'twanttodiehedidn'twantto-

-

Holly gritted her teeth, scanning the skies for any sign of either Regulus or Passion. Things were falling apart fast. That shot from Regulus should've taken that Sovereign out, but it only seemed to make him mad. They still had a chance at least though. It was only a matter of time before Matthew dealt with Lily, and once Oak crushed that other one they could-

Shra-KROOOOOOOM!

There was a deafening roar behind her, and an invisible force knocked Holly to the ground, sending her rolling. She was back on her feet in an instant. What she saw made her eyes widen.

Avak had become enveloped in a brilliant purple aura, his entire body glowing with energy. He still had a hold of Oak's arm, but the rest of Oak's armor was lying in a pile on the ground. There was no body to be seen.

Avak gasped in pain. It felt as if every blood cell in his body had been replaced by razor blades. The pain was so great he could barely move, let alone breathe. His head swam, his vision clouding over and he swayed, doing everything he could to remain upright. There was...something...else as well. Something inside him, twisting roughly in his chest, searching for an outlet, and finding none. It grew fiercer by the moment as it hunted desperately for escape.

Movement at the corner of his eye caught his attention and he turned to see Holly charging at him, Sedna's dropped harpoon in hand, and a wild and desperate look in her eye. Holly clenched her jaw. She had hoped to take Avak about before he saw her coming; that was out of the question now, but she didn't intend to stop. This kid, who-no, whatever he was, was a threat. She half-expected him to turn and run when he saw her coming towards him, but to her surprise he moved to meet her, stumbling as he tried to keep his balance. Holly's eyes narrowed. If he was really that unsteady on his feet, it should be no trouble to take him down!

Tightening her grip on the harpoon Holly thrust forward with all her might, aiming to impale Avak on it, only to have the purple aura surrounding Avak slow the blow to a halt. It was like trying to stab through mud.

Before she could recover her balance, Avak's hands were around her neck, and squeezing. Holly's eyes bugged out; she rasied her hands, trying to pry his fingers from around her throat, but she suddenly felt drained of energy, as if the air around her had turned to quicksand. The aura surrounding Avak grew brighter and brighter as her vision went darker and darker until-

-

"Blue Crow!"

Matthew raised a hand overhead, triggering the Bullet Soul and summoning a murder of the blue carrion eaters from nowhere. As one, the birds dove at Lily, razor-sharp beaks glinting menacingly.

"Excalibur!" Lily called in response, counter-attacking with a blast of lightning that reduced Matthew's crows to charred feathers.

"Ok, then," Matthew growled. "Try this on for size!" He raised his hand again, but Lily had already made her move. There was a burst of light and a whooshing noise as Top Gear was activated, and a heartbeat later, Matthew was sent staggering forward as a sledgehammer blow slammed into his back with a meaty thud.

The Stu calmly steadied himself and reached over his shoulder to feel along his back. He sighed. As he thought. The armor was ruined.

"You know, I don't know whether to pity you, or envy you," He said as he undid the straps holding the armor together. "I keep telling you; try as you might, you can't beat me. Look," He said as he pulled the black rainment off and dropped it to the ground.

Wild Line had ripped open a large gash in the Shadow Knight Armor, and had twisted it's back section beyond repair. But underneath it all, Matthew was still unharmed.

Lily fought to keep the shaking from her legs. She'd triggered Top Gear too often in the past few minutes and now her body was punishing her for it. Unlike most of her other Pins, Top Gear affected Lily directly, rather than just being a focal point to channel destructive energy outward. Instead, the Teleportation Pin twisted space and time for incredibly breif instants, allowing her to move short distances in less time than it took to blink. Humans were never meant to manipulate the forces of nature like that though, and as a result of repeatedly jumping back and forth between reality and oblivion, Lily was almost at her limit.

"Die now," Matthew said, holding up a wrist, "before you disgrace yourself any further. Legion!"

At his command, a series of tentacles sprouted from his back, each topped by a blue eye, which took aim at Lily, and fired. Exhausted from her overuse of Top Gear, Lily was forced to rely on more mundane means to avoid the hail of lasers. She dodged to the right, almost falling as her legs struggled to comply with her mental commands. She may be down, she thought to herself as an ice-blue laser seared the air centimeters from her ear, but she wasn't out just yet.

Keeping her head down, Lily drew on her final reserves of energy and began to run in a wide arc around Matthew, triggering a single Pin all the while. Matthew himself didn't bother turning to tracke her progress, letting the tentacles on his back do the job instead, firing endless streams of energy all the while. Panting, Lily finally completed her circut and returned to her starting point, facing Matthew once again.

"What was that all about?" he asked, as the Legion tentacles retracted back into his back. "Were you trying to waste the last of your energy? You didn't even do anything."

"Think again," Lily spat, her legs shaking uncontrollably now.

Frowning, Matthew turned to look over her shoulder, only to find himself surrounded by a ring of icicles. Confused, he turned back to Lily just in time to see her stamp a shaking foot and bark "Ice Blow!" one last time, a final frozen spear piercing up through the ground to complete the circle.

"And what do you think this is going to accomplish?" Matthew sneered, gesturing at the icicles around them.

Lily didn't reply, closing her eyes and raising her hand. Please... let this work!

"Excalibur!"

She wasn't even trying to hit me, Matthew observed as the bolt of lightning went roaring past him So what was she- Then, from the corner of his eye, he saw it.

The lightning bolt collided with one of the pillars of ice, shattering it into a million peices. Instinctively, Matthew turned his head to get a better look, just in time to see the lightning bolt bounce off the reflective surface of the ice and slam into his chest, staggering him. Before he could recover, Lily sent a second bolt of lightning crashing into another pillar of ice, both it and the lightning bolt splitting as the lightning struck the edge of the ice and split into two separate bolts. One of the split lightning bolts connected with Matthew's side, the other flew into another strategically placed icicle, shattering it, and giving birth to a dozen more bolts of lightning. An instant later, the air was full of electricity, as bolts of lightning zipped back and forth, shattering pillars of ice, ricocheing off their reflective surfaces, and dividing into countless replicas of themselves by the second.

Matthew was hammered relentlessly from every side, unable to regain his balance as the endless storm brutalized his body. He was jerked to one side as a particularly strong blast of lightning struck his shoulder, twisting him around, only to have another bolt of lightning strike the back of his leg, knocking his feet out from under him. Before he'd even hit the ground, there was the dreaded crackle of ozone, and he was sent flying into one of the few icicles left standing with a satisfyingly thick smack.

Adrenaline surged through Lily's veins, driving the exhaustion from her limbs. NOW!

Bracing her wrist her her opposite hand she focused all her remaining energy into the Pin hanging from her wrist for one final strike. "Excali-"

"ENOUGH!"

Matthew's eyes, which had lost their focus from the impact, suddenly snapped back into focus. Grabbing the Chlaim Soliais from where it had fallen from his fingers, he leapt to his feet and swung the white blade in a wide arc, smashing what remained of the Ice Blow psych and scattering the remaining lightning bolts.

Lily's heart nearly stopped beating. What...

As if in response, Matthew spun to face her, his eyes nearly red with fury and Lily gritted her teeth. Matthew may've escaped the her ice mirror trap, but he was weakened, and Excalibur was still charged up. There was no time left to think as Matthew tensed, ready to retaliate, and so, she fired.

"Excalibur!" she cried, the lightning bolt flying from her hand as the command flew from her mouth. Matthew merely sneered in response, flicking Chalim Solais up, the lightning bolt striking the sword and reversing course, striking Lily head-on.

The former Sue screamed as electricity tore through her body, numbing her muscles and turning her limbs to lead. Her legs gave out from under her and she collapsed to the ground, her body twitching as the last of the energy worked it's way through her system.

Tendrils of smoke streamed towards the sky from Matthew's body as he stalked towards the fallen Lily, ignoring the holes the hail of lightning bolts had torn in his tunic. Kneeling, he grabbed her by the hair and jerked her head up to face him. Her eyes were unfocused, but she was still concious as Matthew waved the fist holding the All Father's Ring in front of her face.

"You just don't get it, do you?" He snarled. "It's not just because of this ring, you know, you've never been able to beat me! I've always been stronger than you, and I always will be!" He let go of her hair, letting her head drop back to the stone as he continued. "You were too late anyway. I've already used The Book of Prophecy to obtain the code for Divinity from the demigods here. Soon, I will be a god myself, and when I begin to build my army, every single soldier under my command, down to the merest foot-soldier will be divine beings themselves."

"Just imagine it," Matthew said, kneeling back down to meet Lily's unfocused gaze, ignoring her pitiful struggles to regain control over her body. "An infinite army of gods, all with divine abilities beyond comprehension. What could stand before that?"

Lily tried to reply, but her lips just flapped uselessly, making her look like a fish out of water.

"Fourtnately, for you," Matthew said, standing again, "you won't be around to see it." He raised Chalim Solais. "Goodbye, Bella Aubrey. And good ridd-AGH!"

Matthew jerked his head to one side, narrowly averting decapiating himself on Chlaim Solais as Avak tackled him from behind, knocking both of them to the ground. Matthew opened his mouth to roar some threat, and was mystified to find his lungs empty of air. Before he could try to inhale more, he felt Avak grab him and haul him to his feet. Matthew tried to fight him off, but Avak didn't even seem to notice. Then, he saw it.

Avak body had been enveloped in a corona of raging purple energy, and his mouth had contorted into a grotesque snarl, but it was his eyes that caught Matthew's attention. His irises had turned the same iridescent purple as the energy that swirled around him, but more than that, they were filled with pure, unrestrained hatred.

Avak's was shaking. He had only known anger like this once before, when Ash had threatned Lily, but this one had actually hurt her! He could barely think straight as he bellowed in wordless rage, the sound mixing with Matthew's scream of terror, and the strange sensation inside of him decided it had finally had had enough. It wanted out. Now.

Avak closed his eyes, and pushed.

Summoning all her strength, Lily finally managed to raise her head. Her vision was still blurry, but it was enough to witness what happened next. The energy surrounding Avak flared blindingly bright, surging down his arms and out through his hands.

Time froze for an instant.

Then everything vanished in a single, unearthly explosion.

-

When Lily opened her eyes again, there was nothing but white as far as the eye could see. She blinked, and the tiles of the Medical Wing's ceiling came into focus. She closed her eyes again, breifly wiggling her toes, fingers and everything else to make sure they still worked.

Turning her head, she spotted Avak in the bed next to her. He wasn't moving and her heart leapt into her throat before she quickly forced it back down. The sheets were still moving up and down with the rhythm of his breathing and didn't have any wires or tubes attached to him. He looked fine too, so at least there was nothing seriously wrong with him...she hoped.

The door opened and Valerie walked in, carrying a stack of books. Her eyes lit up at seeing Lily awake.

"Hey! How're you feeling?" The healer asked, setting the books down on the table next to Avak's bed and hurrying over to Lily's bedside.

"I'm fine... I think," Lily mumbled, still tired. "How long was I out?"

"A few hours. I gave you a check-up while you were still unconscious," Valerie offered, "Nothing worse than the usual post-misson wear and tear. You still need to rest though."

Lily nodded. "What happened?"

Valerie sighed. "We knew something was wrong when Passion showed up, but by then it was too late. He'd already locked the fandom down and we couldn't get in. By the time we could open a Plothole, he was already gone."

"And Matthew and Holly?"

Valerie smiled gently. "They've both been Prohibited and are locked up in the basement now. Don't worry about The Book of Prophecy either. Adrian's returning the it to Avalon Code himself and we're going to be keeping a much closer eye on the fandom in the future." She patted Lily on the shoulder. "You finally did it. You stopped them!"

Instead of smiling like Valerie had expected, Lily's face darkened. "No, I didn't," she said softly, "I didn't do anything. All I did was need to be rescued by someone else... again." she murmured.

Valerie bit her lip. Sadness was pouring off of Lily in waves, and worst of all, a tinge of despair was beginning to creep into her aura. Before Valerie could think of something to say that would reassure her, Lily glanced over at Avak's bed.

"What about him?"

Valerie followed her gaze and shrugged. "He's... still out of it. He doesn't seem to be in any worse shape than you, but he still hasn't woken up yet."

"I mean that..." Lily waved her hand vaguely. "That... thing. Whatever it was that he did. What was it?"

Valerie shrugged helplessly. "Nobody knows. Even Adrian and Phonexia are stumped. We have no idea what it was that he did, or why it happened."

"I do."

Ben stood in the doorway, a triumphant smirk on his face, and a laptop tucked under his arm. "He's still unconscious?" he asked as he walked in, nodding towards Avak's bed.

"For now," Valerie replied.

"Pity. I wanted him to come with me when I made my report to Michael."

"Report? On what?" Valerie asked, unable to keep the slightest edge creeping into her voice.

"It's faster just to show you," Ben said, opening the laptop and setting it down on an empty bed. Footage from Avak and Lily's mission was being displayed next a readout screen displaying the amount of Sueish energy resent in the fandom.

"Just watch," Ben said, pressing play.

On screen, Avak was grappling with Oak, when the mysterious purple aura suddenly flared to life around Avak, and Oak's armor collapsed. Valerie's eyes widened as the level of Sue energy in the fandom plummeted. It fell even further once Avak incapacitated Holly, and by the time he'd dealt with Matthew, it was nearly at zero.

Ben stopped the playback, taking a moment to enjoy the stunned look on Valerie's face before announcing: "Avak's developed the ability to absorb Sue energy!"

"But... there was nothing like that in the base file you showed me," Valerie sputtered, her mind racing.

"Neither was the ability to play bass guitar."

"But you added that in for him later, didnt you?"

Ben's grin widened. "No. I didn't."

"Then how-"

"The whole point of Project Warpath is to create legions of soldier-characters." Ben explained. "However, we both know that a character's strength is at least partially determined by how well it's developed. Obviously, there's not enough time in the world to create that many fully-developed characters, so when I wrote Avak, I tried something different. I wrote him as a flat character on purpose, but charged him with an excess of creative energy, in the hope that as time went on, he would unconsciously use that extra energy to develop a personality and abilities on his own."

He turned to face the sleeping weapon. "I wasn't the one who taught Avak to play the bass," he said, "He taught himself. I just told him I was as a placebo. Thanks to that I knew my idea worked, at least to some degree, but I had no idea it succeeded this well."

"Succeeded?" Valerie asked in disbelieif. "He totally lost control of his power and knocked both himself and Lily out!"

Ben shrugged. "Avak was developed as an Anti-Sue weapon, so it stands to reason that his body would reject the presence of Sue energy. Besides, this was his first time using it, of course he doesn't know how to control it yet. But even so," he continued, almost speaking to himself, "to create an explosion of that magnitude without any experence whatsoever..."

That look was back in his eyes, re-awakening the apprenensive fear in Valerie's heart along with it.

"This is even greater than I'd expected," Ben's voice had dropped to a murmur now, his intense gaze burning a hole into the laptop screen. "Originally I'd planned to create at least a battalion of soliders with Warpath, but with powers like this, even a hundred troops would be more than enough to end this war entirely!"

"I'm showing this to Michael!" he exclaimed, slamming the laptop shut and heading for the door. "If this won't convince him to let me start Project Warpath, nothing will!"

Valerie could only stare wide-eyed in horror as Ben rushed out the door, before she set her jaw and hurried after him. Things couldn't go on like this.

Alone in the room, Lily stared down at the sheets, numb. Over in the next bed, Avak murmured something and shifted in his sleep. The sound made Lily ball the blankets up in her fist. As if things weren't complicated enough with Ben already, she just had to go and mess things up even further, didn't she? Why had she kissed Avak? Sweet as he was, he wasn't anything more than a good friend, right?

Glancing over at his bed, Lily realized with a jolt that she wasn't sure exactly how she felt about Avak. He was kind and earnest towards everyone, but now that Lily thought about it, he'd always been doubly so with her, and with the distance between her and Ben growing, she realized just how much she appreciated that. Mabye there was no harm in-

Lily squeezed her eyes shut, cutting the whisper in her heart off mid-sentence. Ben had spared her, saved her life, and given her a home and a reason to live. She couldn't just turn her back on him, especially since he hadn't purposely done anything to hurt her...

She pulled the blankets back up, and started to roll over, but stopped when she felt something in her pocket crinkle. Pulling it out, she unfolded the poem she'd written earlier. She stared at it for a few moments before curling her hand into a fist, crumpling the poem back up before tossing it at the trashcan between her and Avak's beds before rolling back over and squeezing her eyes shut in a vain effort to hold back the tears.

-

"Ben!"

The agent looked over his shoulder at Valerie's call to see the healer bearing down on him, her face grim. He frowned. "Whatever it is, can't it wait?"

"No, it can't wait. We need to talk," Valerie said, reaching him.

"About what?"

Valerie sighed. She had really hoped to avoid this, but he had left her with no choice. She took a deep breath. "Project Warpath is a bad idea, Ben." She said bluntly. There. She'd said it. Now to deal with the fallout.

Ben's frown morphed into a scowl and he folded his arms. "What makes you say that?" he challenged.

"Don't you see?" Valerie asked. "Wasn't what happened today proof enough?"

"What are you talking about?" Ben was incredulous. "Didn't you hear me? Avak's stronger than ever now! He took out two Level 6 Sues single-handedly! A little work and he'll be the ultimate Anti-Sue weapon! A hundred more like him, and this war will be over before the year is out!"

"Avak is not your attack-dog, Ben!" Valerie protested, waving a hand back towards the medical ward. "He's a person with feelings, and he has the same rights as anyone to decide whether or not he puts his life and sanity on the line! The same will hold true for any of the other characters you'll make, but you don't seem to realize that!"

"Attack-dog?" Ben demanded, his voice rising. "Avak knew what he was signing up for, just the same as the rest of us! I gave him a free chance to back out without any consequences whatsoever, but he chose, he chose to become an agent!" Ben said, stabbing the air emphatically. "And in case you hadn't noticed, there's a war on! Everyone's safety and sanity is on the line every day! What you don't realize is that I'm trying to change that!"

"Ben, that boy came here with nothing but a blank slate, and he wasn't capable of refusing his creator a damn thing, not matter how nicely you worded it! How you came to be so damn irresponsible with your character creation, I'll never know, but I will not let you bring more like him into the world!"

Ben bristled. "Wait, wait, wait, wait, you won't let me? This is none of your buisness, Valerie!" he shouted. "Last time I checked, you weren't a Leader, or did someone go and put you in charge while I wasn't looking?"

"How do you expect him to 'know' anything if you made him with no history, no memories to compare anything with?" Valerie retaliated, her voice rising to match Ben's tone. "He doesn't have the mindset or history to harm a fly, let along be some kind of super soldier in someone else's cause!"

"Mindset? Were you watching that last mission? Avak nearly killed both Matthew and Holly! If he hadn't passed out, we'd be digging graves instead of fitting Prohibitors on them!"

"And that's exactly the problem! He has no history, no experience other than what he's had with us, and no basis of morality other than what he observes. What he has observed thus far does not bode well, or have you not been paying attention to that either?"

"Problem?" Ben sputtered. "Once again, we're at war here, Valerie! They have no qualms about killing, why should we? You can prattle on about ethics all you like, but in the end, it's them or us, and they have no morals, except 'kill them all and win'. Right now we've got something like ten god-level Sues running around nearly unchecked, and if we don't stop them, I don't even want to imagine what will happen. Do you?"

Valerie paused for a moment, stung by his question. Then she remembered Avak lying unconscious in the medical wing and she set her jaw. "The Society is not, and never has been anything more than a police force, Ben. We defend ourselves and those we come across, but even if there is an army at our doorstep, it's not our place to decide who lives and who dies. Dave's said it; Rhia's said it; I've said it since the beginning. I don't know how it's escaped your notice, but you need to stop and think about the kind of precedent you're setting!"

"Precedent?" Ben snorted. "I hate to sound like a 1st grader here, but they started it. And in case it's escaped your notice, it's a losing battle we're fighting, and we need something to turn the tide now, or else not only will we be completely over-run, but the multiverse as we know it will cease to be. Now, do you have any bright ideas on how to stop the Sovereigns? Because if you don't, I'd suggest you shut up and get out of my way. I've got a war to win."

Anger boiled up within Valerie's heart as Ben started to turn and leave. "Oh, would you stop and just think for a minute, Ben!" she yelled, Ari materializing over her shoulder, hissing menacingly at Ben as Valerie continued. "If things are really so desperate, then why has Michael hesitated on giving you the okay for this long? He knows what will happen if he gives you the permission for something like this! We. Do. Not. Make. War! The best offense is a good defense, and if Project Warpath goes through, it will turn the Society into nothing but a group of self-important inter-universal bullies!"

Ben fixed Valerie with a withering glare, ignoring the dragon. "Oh, quit acting so self-righteous." He spat. "You don't think I don't know what I'm doing? It's not your decision to make either way. Besides, they made this war, not us. And unlike you, I just so happen to be doing something about it."

Before Valerie could think of a comeback, Ben spun on his heel and stalked off. Valerie just stood there for several seconds, staring after him, her fists clenched in helpless rage.

It wasn't until Ari gently nudged her that she realized she was shaking.

-

Avak's eyes darted from side to side, gripping Abraxis tightly. Something was wrong. There had been something wrong for several days now. Jess, Shirley, Valerie and Ben were all bustling around the band's dingy little practice space, getting things set up for their twice-weekly practice session, but for some reason, Ben and Valerie were never in the same part of the room at the same time.

What was going on? Avak wondered. Was there even anything going on? Ben and Valerie weren't even so much as looking at each other, but Avak wasn't sure if that was proof if there was something wrong, or if it was proof that there wasn't.

"We gonna get rolling, or what?" Shirley growled, spinning a drumstick in her claws with a rhythmic clacking.

Ben slid Bahamut's amp cord into the socket with a click and straightened up. "Ready when you are, girl." He glanced over at their keyboardist. " Jess, you got our song list ready?"

Jess nodded, "I've gone ahead and added that song I wrote too."

Avak's ears perked up at the mention of new songs.

"RapidCycling, right?"

"Yeah."

"I-I've got a song to add in too..."

Ben turned in mild surprise as Avak stood, reaching into his pocket and pulling out a wrinkled peice of paper. It seems Avak was displaying even more talents and abilities than he'd anticipated, he mused as Jess unfolded the sheet and looked over it.

"This is really, really, good, Avak!" she said in surprise. "You wrote this?"

Avak shook his head. "N-no, I found it crumpled up on the floor of the medical wing, and I just thought-"

"That must be one of Danielle's," Valerie put in, glancing over breifly. "She'd mentioned something about letting us use some of her poems for songs earlier."

"So, it's okay then?" Avak asked worriedly.

Valerie nodded. "She said we could use them if we wanted to."

Avak beamed.

"I'll work up some music for this later," Jess said, folding the paper back up and reaching for the folder she used to store the bands music.

"Well, we've got all the songs we need," Ben said as Jess started flipping through the sheets in the folder. "We've got all our members, now all we need is a frigging band name."

"My suggestion still stands."

"We are not going to call our band The Dead Librarians, Shirley."

"Hey, it has that literary flavor Jess wants."

"Shit..." Jess groaned, interrupting their bickering.

"What's up?"

"I can't find the lyrics for RapidCycling," the keyboardist pouted. "I must've lost the page somewhere," she muttered throwing the folder back onto a chair as Ben's eyes widened.

"Wait a minute... what did you just say?"

Jess frowned. "I... said I was missing a page. Why?"

Ben's grin was wider than his face.

"Ladies and gentlemen," he said, turning to face the rest of the band. "I believe we've found ourselves a name..."