They stayed above the seemingly endless quilt of dense gray clouds as they soared across the city. At first Alex had trouble breathing normally, but he soon got the hang of it. He couldn’t help but let all his anxieties and fears float away, into the night air that chapped his lips and kept his eyes half-squinted. Every so often the cover would break, and suddenly he had stunning views of places in Sterling City he’d never seen before. He wondered how Kirbie ever managed to stay on the ground when she could have views like this all the time.
It took them almost half an hour to get to Silver Lake, the northernmost neighborhood in the city. When they got close, Kirbie let out a shrill call and they began to descend. Alex whipped out the device Gage had given him, scanning the area around them.
“I’m not getting anything on thermal yet,” he shouted so Kirbie could hear. Then, taking a closer look at the screen, he squinted in confusion. “Wait, that can’t be right. . . .”
Before he could investigate further, they were flying through the clouds, the thick, damp air filling his lungs. And when they finally emerged into the open, he saw that the device hadn’t been malfunctioning. Far ahead of them were the house and garage on Silver Lake. Or at least, it was the place where these buildings had been. Now there was nothing but embers and thick black smoke.
Kirbie let out another call, breaking Alex’s stunned silence. He looked back and forth between the ground and the device in his hands.
“I’m not seeing anyone,” he said. “Just the burning buildings.”
Still, Kirbie circled the site a few times before landing near the edge of the water, where the dock had jutted out into the private cove. Now the dock was gone, leaving a few splintered boards behind. Half the water was still frozen over from the day before, the other half a slushy, melted mess.
“I didn’t see anyone either,” Kirbie said after she morphed back into her human form and started making her way up the sloping bank. Thick curls of black smoke swirled upward all around them as Alex followed. They passed the propeller from the boat that had been sitting in the garage the last time Alex had seen it. Now it was wedged into a tree a dozen yards away. He recognized the destruction that Barrage’s powers could cause. A mixture of fire and pressure and explosive force that broke apart everything it touched.
The garage had been leveled. It was nothing but a pile of debris smoking on top of a black foundation. Alex’s thoughts tore over the scorched pieces of wood and metal and concrete, picking through the destroyed building and sending embers and ash flying. His face and hands stung as tiny bits of orange rested on them, fading to dark gray smudges. In a few moments he’d dismantled the shell of the garage that remained and began sifting through the ruined tools and equipment, the items darting in front of his face as fast as his brain could latch on to them. Kirbie stayed back, watching as the items flew like mangled metal birds through the air before her.
Minutes ticked by as Alex continued, growing more frustrated, focusing more intensely, until in one wave of thought he sent all the refuse in the air flying backward and deep into the wooded area behind the garage. He started in on what remained on the ground, sifting and searching and plowing through the brittle, seared matter until finally he found it. The Gloom Key, with the huge Excelsior diamond mounted on top. Half a plastic cooler was melted around it. He smiled.
And then he turned the device over with his thoughts. The containment unit that had held Phantom’s dark energy was punctured. Empty.
The Gloom Key was useless.
“Of course . . . ,” Kirbie said, stepping up beside Alex.
“We didn’t even get a chance to see if it would still work now that Phantom’s gone,” he whispered.
Alex furrowed his eyebrows together and concentrated. The Excelsior diamond flew out of its mounting and hovered in front of them. He let the rest of the device fall to the ground. It was useless now. The diamond lit up as it reflected the small fires and embers surrounding them. Not long ago, he would have given anything to have the Excelsior. It had been his primary target on his first mission, back when everything seemed so easy, so black and white. Get into the vault. Steal the diamond. Prove your worth. Make your parents proud.
“If I’d known how much trouble this thing was going to cause . . . ,” Alex trailed off, staring at the jewel.
“What?” Kirbie asked. “You would have done things differently?”
“Not everything.”
Kirbie turned to the place where the house had stood. There was less remaining of it than the garage. Alex took the communicator and radioed back to Amp, telling him that the Gloom Key was a dead end and that they’d be back soon.
“They know about the underground tunnel now,” Kirbie said. “If they know about this place, they know about it, too. They know about everything.”
“Not Carla’s. We’re still safe there.”
“For now.”
“We could just fly away,” Alex said. Kirbie turned and stared at him. He wasn’t even sure where those words had come from, just that at that moment all he wanted to do was leave, to put everything behind them.
“I know,” he continued. “We can’t.”
“Why not?” she asked.
Alex shrugged. He didn’t think she was actually looking for an answer. She’d never run away. She’d brought them all the way out here in the name of fighting until the end, after all.
“I don’t know,” Alex said. “Because it’s not the right thing to do.”
“Congratulations, Alex Knight,” she said. “You’re a superhero. I was right about you all along.”
“Yeah. And look what you got for trying to talk sense into your enemy.”
“Where would we go?” she asked. “What would we do if we weren’t trying to save the world?”
“I don’t know,” Alex said. “What do normal kids do? Go to school? Take math tests?”
“Play sports. Perform in musicals. Get detention.”
“Oh, I’ve had detention. I had to be a moving target for the others while they were shooting paintballs at me.”
“Oh yeah?” She gave a small smile. “Once I snuck out of Justice Tower for a flight. I had to clean the entire inside of the dome as punishment.”
“I guess that just means we definitely aren’t normal kids.”
He started to sift through the ashes of the house, but it was quickly apparent that it was of no use. They weren’t going to find anything they could use there. Their lists and blueprints, Gage’s notes—everything was gone. He sighed, staring at the clouds.
“You doing okay?” she asked.
“Yeah,” Alex said, but even he could hear that it wasn’t a very convincing answer.
“Look, I’m not going to push you or anything, but I want you to know that what happened at the groundbreaking wasn’t your fault, okay? It was an accident. We’re practically in a war right now, Alex. I’m surprised none of us have been hurt more than we already have. And we . . . we never should have done things so quickly, without proof or knowing what Cloak was up to. You tried to stop us, but we were so sure that just having Lone Star and Lux back would fix everything that we ignored all the warning signs.”
“What if . . . ,” Alex started. “What if it wasn’t an accident, though? What if it was my Cloak training, or something like that? I don’t want it to happen again.”
“There,” Kirbie said, squinting her hazel eyes a little. “What you just said. Doesn’t that prove you didn’t mean for Phantom to really get hurt?”
“But—”
“I know you pretty well, Alex. I could tell you were one of the good guys when you didn’t even know it yourself. If you wanted me to, I could talk for the next hour about how much I believe that what happened today wasn’t on purpose, or how even if it was, it probably saved a ton of people in the long run and definitely helped us out, or how I’m pretty sure that Cloak wouldn’t flinch if one of the Junior Rangers bit it in the middle of a fight—but I’m guessing this is all stuff you already know and don’t want to hear me talk about. So instead, just know that all of us still trust you and everything. Nothing’s changed.”
Alex stared at her, his mouth parted slightly. The blue tint of his vision had rolled away as she spoke, leaving her in full color.
“Please say something, or else I’m going to keep talking and end up feeling really dumb.”
“Thanks,” he said. “Really. I needed that.”
“Good.”
“Now we just have to figure out how to save the city. And how to get Lone Star back to being more of a superhero.”
“And if we can’t do that, we’ll defeat Cloak without him.”
“That’s treasonous talk,” Alex said, though he wasn’t sure if he was using the word “treasonous” correctly.
Kirbie shrugged. “I guess I’ve picked a few things up from you in the last few months, too.”
Alex started to respond defensively, but her smile stopped him.
“We should get back,” she said. “Is there anything else we need to do while we’re here?”
“No,” Alex said. “I think we’ve gotten all we can from this place.”
They were halfway back home when Kirbie, in her bird form, jerked to the side suddenly, looping around and diving through a break in the clouds. Alex’s feet flew back, his coat whipping around his legs. He was disoriented, hardly able to tell up from down as they plummeted toward the earth, landing on the top of some tall structure.
“What’s going on?” Alex asked, getting to his feet, braced for an attack. He looked over the side of the roof. They appeared to be on top of a school auditorium.
“Don’t you notice anything weird?” Kirbie asked. When it took Alex a moment to respond, she continued, “There aren’t any lights on anywhere, Alex. It’s a blackout.”
Of course. A darkness had settled on the city. For as far as Alex could see, there were no streetlamps on, no lights in the windows.
“This is crazy,” he said. “I guess my father might have been able to do something to the power grid. Or Photon could have—”
“Shhh,” she cut him off. Her features were shifting, changing, her ears pointing outward and hinting at transformation. “There’s something happening over there.”
A block away, four Deputies were dragging a family out of their home. Dogs were barking. Alex could hear the family—a man and woman, a teenager, and two kids who looked much younger than Alex—all screaming and shouting. There were no police, no flashing lights. Only the Rangers’ Deputies and a black paddy wagon.
“Crap,” Alex said. “What do you think it is?”
“I don’t know. But if the Deputies are doing it, it can’t be good, right?”
“How far are we from Carla’s?”
“Far enough that they’d never be able to track us there,” Kirbie said. “What do you say? I could blow off some steam with a good fight right now.”
Alex didn’t respond, but gave her a sly grin.
“Let’s do some hero work.”
She transformed as she leaped into the air, swooped around, and then grabbed Alex, flying down the block. She released him with a pendulum swing of her talons, sending him rocketing toward one of the Deputies, a middle-aged man who never saw Alex coming. The boy’s feet struck against the man’s chest, sending him sailing backward through the air.
“Sorry to drop in on you.” Alex grinned.
“Seriously?” Kirbie asked, as she landed beside him. “That’s your line?”
The remaining three Deputies—and the family—looked stunned for a moment, and Alex and Kirbie didn’t give anyone time to make a move against them. A telekinetic blast knocked the wind out of a woman in blue and silver, while Kirbie took out a teenage girl who appeared to have the ability to produce strobe-light effects from her eyes. All of them were carrying Cloak-issue laser pistols.
That left only one Deputy. Alex sent a telekinetic bolt into the man’s stomach, but he didn’t budge. Kirbie rammed a shoulder into the man’s back, to no effect. They continued trying to knock him down for a few more seconds, using a variety of powered and non-powered attacks. Finally Kirbie stopped.
“What are you?” she asked. “Some kind of human boulder?”
The man, who had appeared to be stunned into still silence throughout the attacks, spoke up.
“I have a very strong center of gravity.”
“That is not a superpower,” Alex said, and with a few stray thoughts, he had four laser pistols pointing at the man’s head.
Kirbie turned to the family. They’d sent the two younger kids inside. A middle-aged man and woman stood on the lawn, in front of the teenage boy, whom they appeared to be hiding.
“What do you want?” the man asked.
“Want?” Kirbie was confused. “Just to stop whatever they were doing.”
“I know who you are,” the woman said. “You’re criminals.”
“You have no idea,” Alex murmured.
“Why were they here?” Kirbie asked, ignoring her teammate.
“You can’t have him!” the man said, taking a step forward.
Alex zeroed in on the still-standing Deputy. He tapped one of the guns against the man’s forehead.
“What were you doing here?”
The Deputy stammered a bit before words finally came out.
“The kid’s been drafted,” he said, his voice several pitches higher than it was before the four weapons were floating around him. “We had orders to collect him. The whole family if they gave us trouble. It’s an honor to be wanted by the Rangers.”
Alex turned to the three civilians on the lawn, his face twisted in confusion.
“It was just a rumor,” the woman said. “Some kids at school made it up to give him trouble.”
“Did you call the police?” Kirbie asked.
“I am a police officer,” the woman said. “Trust me when I say there’s nothing that calling the police would have done but get good officers in trouble.”
“Oh, come on,” the teenage boy said, pushing through his parents. He clapped his palms together in front of his chest. Both hands erupted into flames. “I can take them. They’re just kids.”
Alex pointed a finger and lifted him into the air. The boy’s smug self-assurance faded into fear. The fire disappeared. Still, Alex was impressed with his guts.
“We’re not here to hurt you,” Kirbie said, casting a chiding look at Alex. The teenager sank back to the ground.
“Do you have a car?” Alex asked.
“Out back,” the boy’s father said. His voice wobbled just a hint.
“I’d suggest getting out of the city. I know the people after your son. They don’t give up easily.”
The family stood there in silence before nodding and hurrying inside. The woman stopped just before entering.
“Thank you,” she said.
Kirbie and Alex turned to the remaining Deputy.
“Who ordered this?” Kirbie asked.
“One of the higher Deputies. An Alpha.”
“You’re kidding me,” Alex said.
“Cloak never was one for original ranking systems, I guess,” Kirbie said.
“And this blackout. I’m guessing that was you guys, too?”
“U-uh . . . ,” the Deputy stammered. “All I know is that right before they sent the squads out, everything went dark.”
“Squads?” Kirbie asked. “Plural?”
“I don’t know how many. A few dozen, maybe?”
“And they’re all collecting people?”
“Yeah,” the Deputy said. He averted his eyes from theirs. “Anyone with powers. Or people rumored to be speaking out against the Rangers.”
Alex swallowed hard. Even if his teammates were there with him, there was no way they could stop every Deputy sent out. He felt useless as he glanced around the yard. His thoughts focused on a garden hose and wrapped it around the standing Deputy, tying it tight. The other three remained down.
“Please, please. I won’t tell anyone about you if you let me go safely,” the Deputy pleaded. “Honest.”
“You will report this. Not to an Alpha. To the New Rangers,” Alex said, mustering up his most authoritative voice. “As soon as you manage to get yourself free, you go straight to them. That’s the price of us letting you go.”
The man looked confused, but nodded hurriedly.
“Good,” Alex said. “When you talk to Shade, tell her that her son is coming for her.”
“We should get out of here,” Kirbie said.
“Yeah, let’s—”
A pounding from inside the paddy wagon interrupted him. He and Kirbie looked at each other, then hurried to the big black vehicle, flanking either side of the back. Kirbie nodded to Alex, who wrenched open the doors with his thoughts.
There was a series of gasps. Alex looked inside to find a dozen sets of eyes looking at him, maybe more—it was difficult to tell in the darkness. The captives stared back at them, unsure of what to do.
“This is crazy,” Kirbie whispered.
“They’re not just building a new police force,” Alex said. “They’re drafting an army.”