Chapter 10: “We Have a Problem”
Powerhouse landed outside the brick building of the Power Street Community Church. The sign out front still read, “Reverend Jones, Pastor.”
It’s been a year and a half since he died. It’s about time to change the sign.
Powerhouse scanned the church. “No one in the building.”
A basketball bounced in the youth center. Powerhouse marched over to the entrance. On the door was a gold plaque. In loving memory of Pastor Thaddeus Jones.
Powerhouse bowed his head. If only he hadn’t gotten lured away and left Jones unprotected long enough for Marco to kill him. If only I’d listened to you when you were alive. I hope you know your words weren’t wasted on me.
Swallowing, Powerhouse ducked through the open gym door. A young black woman in a sleeveless white t-shirt and a pair of blue gym shorts raced up the basketball court with her hair in a pony tail that flowed out of her Seattle Storm baseball cap.
“Excuse me!” Powerhouse waved. “Do you know where the pastor is?”
The woman stopped and caught the basketball. “You’re looking at her.”
Powerhouse raised an eyebrow. She didn’t look like a pastor. “I need to talk to you.”
“Let me clean up.”
“Okay, I’ll be back in half an hour.” Powerhouse exited the gym and rocketed over the area. There had to be something he could do while he waited. Powerhouse flew over a neighborhood grocer.
A young woman in an orange blouse and a pair of denim capris got out of her dirty blue Ford Escort with a little boy. Tears streamed down her face.
The boy tugged on her arm. “Momma, are you okay?”
She wiped her eyes. “It’s okay, honey. I just miss Daddy.”
“Me too, Momma.”
Powerhouse hovered above the market. Maybe he could help her somehow. But what did she need?
A man in a blue polo shirt and a pair of shorts passed the woman, sauntered by her car, and sneered at it. He wrote on the dirty windshield, “Wash me.”
Powerhouse landed and eyed the car’s back bumper. Gold star. He snarled and counted ten. He whispered, “Lord, help me not to be a big jerk when I confront this guy.”
Powerhouse raced across the parking lot on foot. The man in the khaki shorts opened the door to a blue Jeep.
“Hold up, citizen!”
The man jumped. “Powerhouse? What can I do for you?”
“Come with me.”
“Sure, it’s my day off.”
Powerhouse led the man to the car he’d written on.
The man ran his fingers through his hair. “Why are you leading me to this filthy thing? I don’t get why anyone would let their car get that dirty.”
“I do.” Powerhouse pointed to the bumper sticker. “Do you see that?”
The man eyed the bumper sticker. “Gold star wife? What does that mean? Her husband got a good grade in school?”
Powerhouse clinched his fist and swallowed. “A blue star wife’s husband is serving in the military. A gold star wife’s husband died while serving in the military.”
The man swallowed. “Oh.” He gazed at the unfaded bumper sticker. “It looks like she just put it on.” He stared at his shoes. “Okay, so I’m a big jerk. What can I do?”
“The car’s already told you.”
He stared at his writing. “I don’t have anything to wash the car with.”
Powerhouse super-imagined a portable power sprayer filled with water, a bucket of soapy water, two sponges, and a large towel.
“Oh.” The man blinked. “Pretty nifty.”
“All right, citizen. Let’s fight grime.” Powerhouse scrubbed the front of the car and the man in the khaki shorts scrubbed the rear.
Powerhouse finished scrubbing the passenger front door. “Citizen, I have an appointment. I’ll leave the rinsing and drying to you. Keep the equipment.”
“What for?”
“In case you see another car that needs cleaned. Powerhouse away!”
Powerhouse rocketed back to the church. The church door was unlocked. He walked back to the office. The sign said, “Leticia Jones, Pastor.”
Powerhouse found the women’s basketball player in Reverend Jones’ office pacing as she read Smith’s Bible Dictionary. She stood at six foot, one inch tall. Tiny black braids fell to the middle of her back. She wore a saffron, mid-calf dress.
Wow. She looked more like a princess than a pastor.
She put down the dictionary and sat behind Reverend Jones’ desk. “Have a seat.”
Powerhouse lowered himself into the leather office chair. “Are you related to the old pastor, Reverend Jones?”
“He was my uncle.”
“I’m sorry. I was supposed to be guarding him, but there was an emergency.”
She put up her left hand. “I read the news articles. My uncle would’ve wanted you to save downtown from the nut with the rocket. He would’ve put their lives first. Now, what is it I can do for you today?”
Guess she didn’t want to talk about his failure. Powerhouse sighed. “I’m back to fighting crime, but my counselor tells me it’s not enough to clean and sweep the house. I have to replace the evil with good. Otherwise, the evil will just come back.”
She scribbled on a yellow legal pad. “What’s your idea?”
“I can clean up the neighborhoods, help churches move in to replace the crime.”
“By setting up youth centers, food pantries, satellite churches, that sorta thing?”
“Yeah.”
She dropped her pen and leaned back, putting her hands behind her head. “We’re struggling to keep our existing ministries going. I don’t know how Uncle Thaddeus managed to pay for all this. Must have been like the Lord feeding the five thousand.”
Powerhouse frowned. If there was one congregation in Seattle that he could count on, it was this church. “What about other churches?”
“Are you a believer?”
Powerhouse nodded. “A late comer, but yes.”
“I could see if I could get together some of the pastors. You could share your testimony and see who you can get to come on board.”
What? Powerhouse shook his head. “I’m not a preacher. Superheroes don’t testify as their superhero identities, and why would the pastors need to hear my testimony? There are people that need help. I’m willing to help them.”
“This is a ministry effort you’re organizing, Powerhouse. The faith of the leaders of a ministry they support matters to most pastors who preach the gospel.” She leaned forward. “Also, superheroes do to testify.”
“No, they don’t.”
“You mean superheroes never tell anyone their origin story? I’ve read it in hundreds of comic books.”
Powerhouse blinked. “You read comic books?”
“Yeah. Superheroes testify all the time about what happened to them, how the spider bit them or their daddy got shot. So why can’t you explain what God has done?”
“They don’t tell this type of thing to everybody in the comic books.”
She waved. “It’ll be closed doors with pastors only. No recording. Anything you got to keep secret for safety, you don’t have to share. Think of all those raggedy super villains that have showed up pretending to be heroes and roped stupid folks into helping them. When they’re unmasked, it’s a big embarrassment. Why did it happen? Because super villains had a different testimony.”
Okay, she was related to Thaddeus Jones. “Do you think I’m a super villain?”
“No. Uncle Thaddeus spoke well of you and he was a wise man, but we’re tapped out. If you think the support of the youngest pastor in the city is going to do anything for you, you got another think comin’. However, I know a few pastors of big churches who’d like to meet you. They’ll listen to you, but you better be prepared to talk to them about what you’re about. Just tell your story. Nobody expects you to be a preacher.”
Powerhouse nodded. “All right, you get the meeting together. Any day other than Sunday and any night other than Tuesday.”
“I’ll get it set up. How do I get in touch with you?”
Powerhouse pulled out a card. “I set up an email address.”
“I’ll be in touch.”
Powerhouse stood and headed out. He turned. “Do you really read comic books?”
“Not much any more, but I still subscribe to your comic books.”
Powerhouse smiled. Maybe this would work out after all.
###
Mitch Farrow grinned as he spoke into the receiver to the managing editor of the Guardian. “Jeff, you came through with some interesting information on Powerhouse.”
“I don’t know how interesting it’ll be. He’s not allowing press in. Only a select group of pastors. We can’t sneak in, but we can still run a story about the meeting.”
And step all over my plan. “You’ll do no such thing. Your boys may not know how to get information, but I do. I’ll handle this.”
Jeff took a deep breath. “Mr. Farrow, you’re not a newshound any more.”
Farrow wiggled a finger. “If there’s a story I’ll get it.” And if he could gain more by keeping it to himself, he’d have that option. “Now, you’ve got a paper to run. Let me know if you get any more Powerhouse tips.”
He hung up on the editor and called his secretary. “Have Marcy bring the car around. I need to go to Radio Shack.” Farrow twirled a 360 in his office chair. “It’s going to be like old times.”
###
Powerhouse stood near the podium. Seventy-five pastors sat at banquet tables, with the remains of ham sandwiches and potato chips on their paper plates.
Leticia Jones joined Powerhouse. “You ready to go?”
“With a lot of prayer, yes.”
She pointed at Zolgron. “Who’s he?”
“Oh, that’s the Gray Giant.” Powerhouse smirked. Zolgron was really going to regret choosing that secret identity one of these days. “He’s helping out with security.”
The Gray Giant strode to Powerhouse and whispered, “There’s a listening device under one of the front row tables broadcasting to a location several miles away. Start your speech and I’ll get that out of here once I’m able to hone in on where the receiver is.”
“Thanks, Big Gray.” Powerhouse nodded and turned to Leticia. “Pastor, go ahead with the introduction.”
Leticia stood at the podium and turned on its mic. “Brothers and sisters, we’re ready to start. Pastor Levitz, will you open us in prayer?”
An old man wearing a black sweater stood. “Let us pray.”
Powerhouse bowed his head. Lord, if you could have a super villain like Doc Oc show up right now, so we could fight a battle to the death and I wouldn’t have to give the speech, I’d like that. If not, help me to do a good job.
Pastor Levitz intoned, “Amen.”
Leticia beamed at Powerhouse. “We’re glad to have Powerhouse with us today. Come ahead and share.”
She took a seat and Powerhouse stepped behind the podium. Maybe it’d be good to start with something familiar. “Everyone bow their head and close their eyes.”
Everyone closed their eyes except for the Gray Giant.
Powerhouse cleared his throat. “Who wanted to be a superhero when they grew up? Raise your hand. Don’t be embarrassed. No one can see you but me.”
Two thirds of the hands shot up.
Powerhouse smiled. This would be easier than he’d thought. “Thank you, you can lower your hands and look up. I had that same dream. Only for me-”
Boom! Paper plates flew all over the room. Powerhouse jumped and glanced around for the Gray Giant, but only found pastors ducking for cover.
###
Mitch sat at his desk, listening to his bugged table’s radio, a scrap of blue paper at his side and a pen in hand. Of all the idiotic exercises he’d ever heard speakers use over the years, that had been the lamest. Now, it was time to get to the action.
A noise like a semi-truck passing a compact car replaced Powerhouse’s voice. Mitch grabbed the receiver and shook it. He swore. Made in China.
His door banged open. In burst a basketball-football player sort dressed in a green cape and black body armor and wearing gray skin paint that looked authentic. Costumed Jerk stood before him holding the transmitter. “No problem with the receiver”
Costumed Jerk tossed the transmitter on the desk.
Mitch scowled. “Who are you and what do you want?”
“I’m the Grey Giant and I’d like a show on Food Network, though that’s more of a long-term goal. My card.”
Mitch took the card. A vaguely familiar western theme song emitted from it as he read it. Have Superpowers, Will Travel. Email Gray Giant.
The Grey Giant puffed out his chest. “I got the idea from Paladin.”
Who? Mitch chuckled. “Nice card. With a name like Gray Giant, you’d fit right in on the Food Network.” Mitch closed his eyes and sung, “Ho ho ho, Gray Giant!”
The Gray Giant grimaced. “I was curious who’d be listening in to Powerhouse’s little talk and why.”
Mitch adjusted his tie. “Ever hear of freedom of the press?’’
“Ever hear of the right to privacy and journalistic ethics? Your people seem to forget whatever is inconvenient at the moment.”
“Look, it’d be a heck of a story and I do know somebody who knows someone at the Food Network. Just put that bug back and the show’s yours.”
Gray Giant glowered. “Do you really think that I, the mighty Gray Giant, am subject to such petty bribery?”
“Everyone has their price.”
“You’re the most cynical person I’ve met.”
“I’d better be. That’s how I got this job.”
The Gray Giant turned towards the door
“Hey, I also know someone at TLC.”
The Grey Giant spun around. “Bah! If you have any other great ideas to surreptitiously record the meeting, forget it. I put a dampening field around the room that will stop all transmissions in or out until the speech is done.”
“What if someone has an emergency and needs to make a cell phone call or text?”
“Your people’s idea of an emergency text is usually ‘OMG, I left my keys at school.’ Hardly worth the security risk.” Gray Giant burst out the door.
Mitch leaned back in his chair and laughed. Good thing that guy wasn’t a threat to the Cause right now. When it was time to invade, Gray Giant would need to be dealt with, if he still hadn’t been made to see that he was fighting on the wrong side.
###
Dressed in his Superman bathrobe, mild-mannered father Dave Johnson walked past Zolgron. Zolgron slouched on the couch drooling at the Home Shopping channel.
Dave smiled. “Morning, Gray Giant.”
“For the last time, stop calling me that.”
“I told you it’d get you teased before you took that name.”
Zolgron sighed. “Yes, but I didn’t think adults would be that childish, particularly a CEO, and I didn’t know what it was like to be teased.”
Dave waved it aside. “Everyone gets teased.”
“Not the champion of the Karonites. Most would dare not tease me. I could’ve scattered Mitch Farrow’s molecules throughout the galaxy for that impudence. For the sake of your reputation, however, I refrained from unleashing my fury on him.”
“Very thoughtful of you.”
Zolgron sighed. “This seems to have lessened my powers slightly. I think I only ran 250 miles an hour back to the conference room.”
“So that’s why you’ve been moping around the house.”
He shoved a handful of popcorn in his mouth. “I haven’t been moping. I’ve been recovering.”
One thing would snap Zolgron out of this for sure. “We’re running out of groceries. I’m going to get some TV dinners.”
Zolgron gasped. “Don’t shame me like that!”
“I could always imagine some food into existence.”
“The true chef can’t cook with that.” He stood. “I shall go get fresh ingredients, prepare the family appropriate meals for the next few days, and then I’ll fly off to India and take my frustrations out on Marxist guerillas that are harassing villagers.”
Dave slapped Zolgron on the shoulder. “That’s the spirit.”
Zolgron headed for the back door. Dave opened the front door and picked up the newspaper. Front Page headline was “City Councilman Charged with Bribery.” The second headline was, “Fire in Tacoma Kills Seven.”
He flipped to the bottom of page A-11and read under a giant ad for a used car sale. “Local Pastors form Alliance with Powerhouse to Fight Poverty and Crime.”
Dave slipped into his bedroom. Naomi lay in their bed, wearing a pink flannel night gown. Dave tossed Naomi the paper. “Here you go.”
She picked up the paper. “Why is it turned to page eleven?”
“Look at the article on the bottom.”
Naomi gasped. “Really? I’m so proud of you!”
Dave beamed.
Naomi scanned the article. “How many projects are they going to establish?”
“First we have to raise the money and see how much we can afford to do.”
“Too bad you just can’t make everything appear.”
“Don’t tempt me. I’m going to be the main attraction at our kickoff. People will pay to get in and I’ll sign autographs. Whatever we take in goes to our first project.”
“Why don’t you sound excited?”
Dave paced. “They had an idea for an extra fundraiser that only I can run.”
“Wow, what is it?”
Dave swallowed and braced himself. “Flying with Powerhouse.”
Naomi leaned back and bit her lip. She pulled a pen and paper out of the drawer and doodled. She dropped her pen. “Powerhouse can do that, but on one condition.”
###
“Powerhouse!” a deep voice bellowed behind him as he stood across the street from the park near a one block row of closed shops. He turned around.
Chief of Police Stone Bachman ran up in a short-sleeved black shirt and a pair of jeans. “There you are. They’re waiting on you.”
“Just a moment, I’m taking steps to make sure my time at the fundraiser is not interrupted by crimes.”
The chief sighed. “We have two extra cars patrolling the area.”
“We need to be sure. I’ve seen all the warning signs around the city. I thought if I could put a few up here, I could get criminals to stay away during the fundraiser.”
“Signs? What signs?” The chief turned to the bakery behind them. “Oh, I see. ‘No Crime allowed,’ eh?”
“I put one on that vacant shop.”
The chief strode over to it “Thank you for not stealing cars.” The chief chortled. “Nice.” They marched down to the jewelry store and glanced at the white sign on its door. “This is a crime-free zone.”
On the shop at the end of the block was the last sign. Bachman smiled. “No Crime. Violators will be punished at their own expense.”
“So what do you think?” Powerhouse grinned and rubbed his hands together.
“I guess it’s an interesting experiment in criminology.” The chief laughed. “If it makes you feel better by all means. Just have them down after the fundraiser.”
“Thanks, Chief.” Powerhouse slapped the chief’s back. “Now, to the fundraiser!”
###
Powerhouse lowered the captain’s chair containing a fortyish woman with medium-length blonde hair. The crowd applauded. The grinning woman stood beside Powerhouse. A volunteer professional photographer took a picture of them.
She shook his hand. “Powerhouse, thank you.”
“It was a pleasure, citizen.” Powerhouse walked away to where Naomi was standing, wearing a white sleeveless dress with a red zigzag pattern.
She beamed. “So how has it been?”
“No one’s complained.” Powerhouse shrugged. “I guess it works.”
Pastor Leticia Jones stood with a mobile microphone in her hand and waved to the crowd. “Hey, ya’ll. Is this a fundraiser or what? This beat everything we expected. This community is ready to take back our city and bring light into the realm of darkness.”
The crowd cheered.
“We only need one more ride with Powerhouse and we’ll have the money for a down payment for a new church where a drug dealer used to live. Anyone want a ride?”
A seven-year-old girl near Powerhouse tugged on a thin woman’s baggy dark gray wool coat. “Mummy, can I go up with Powerhouse?”
The thin woman also spoke with a British accent. “Dearie, it’s a thousand dollars. With our medication, we have to watch our pennies.”
Her daughter lowered her chin and frowned. “Okay, Mummy.”
Naomi looked at them and over at Powerhouse.
He nodded. Go ahead, Naomi.
She smiled at the girl’s mother. “I’d be happy to pay for your daughter.”
The woman sniffed. “Madam, I don’t take charity.”
“It’s not. It’s something I want to do not just for your daughter, but for the city.”
“Fine.” The woman reached into her wallet. “I insist on paying $200 of it. My ex-husband finally got a new job and made good on my alimony. I think he’d find some irony in his money going to help build a church.” She handed Naomi money but kept her eyes down.
Naomi nodded. “Okay, your $200 and my $800.”
Stomach tied in knots, Powerhouse shifted from foot to foot. When do they stop negotiations and I start flying?
“Thank you. I’m Rebecca Farrow.” She extended her hand.
Powerhouse arched his eye brow. Mitch Farrow’s ex-wife?
Naomi shook Rebecca’s hand. “You’re welcome. My name is Naomi.”
The women walked over to the pastor and handed her their money.
Powerhouse bent down by the girl. “Hello, honey. What’s your name?”
She beamed. “My name is Rosalyn, but you can call me Rosie, Powerhouse.”
“Rosie, let’s go for a ride.” Powerhouse flew up into the Seattle sky with Rosie in his arms, past the ocean and mighty skyscrapers.
Rosie pointed at the old Ross Insurance building and read the sign. “El-Door-ado. My daddy works there. Can we go see him?”
Her daddy really was Mitch Farrow? Wow. Well, if the jerk had such a sweet daughter, he couldn’t be all bad. “He may be busy working in a big office, but we can fly by his window. What floor is he on?”
###
Mitch tossed the newspaper on his desk and cursed. “Here I’m trying to get skepticism and cynicism up and along comes Mr. Goody Good and starts this thing in my own backyard.” That and the anonymous ‘God bless’ guy doing all the random acts of kindness had to be stopped.
Mitch paced. Powerhouse was a sadistic, evil spreader of medieval fairy tales, a cruel false prophet of non-existent hope. He’d put an end to him one way or another.
Someone was tapping on his window. Clumsy window washers.
Mitch spun and gasped. “Rosie!”
She waved at him, her gaunt body ravaged by the disease he’d given her. He clinched his fist. Did Powerhouse dare taunt him with the pain he’d caused? That smile. It was the result of false hope from her mother, the cruelest thing in the world. Her only real hope lied in the invasion that would bring a cure for Rosie and all like her.
He turned away from Rosie. It was too painful to look at her. He had to bring this thing to a head to save her. He had to focus. He pressed a button on his desk. Electronic curtains closed and Rosie’s heartbreaking face disappeared from the window.
He took a breath and dialed a number. “This is the Pharaoh. I need to talk. We have a problem.”
###
Outside the window, Powerhouse clutched Rosie to his chest. She sobbed uncontrollably. Powerhouse scowled at the closed shutters. What kind of heartless creep could treat a sweet little girl like this?
Rosie craned her neck toward Powerhouse. “Why doesn’t my daddy love me no more?’
“I don’t know what’s wrong with him.” Powerhouse shook. He was the most powerful man on Earth, second only to Zolgron, but there was nothing he could do to fix her heart. Except pray. Lord, you can help Rosie. I don’t know how, but please help her.
Rosie touched his shoulder. “Powerhouse, can I go back to my mom?”
Powerhouse clutched Rosie tight to him. “Sure thing, honey.”
Powerhouse will return with Captain France and Major Speed in Powerhouse and Rise of the Robolawyers: Coming December 2012