Easy. Sure.
If you could resurrect a city, 600,000-plus people. If you could basically hop in a machine that bent time and could carry you back to a moment before the demigods who should have guided aspirations instead sparked fears, then maybe Soledad could trade her solitude for effusiveness.
Wasn't gonna happen.
So, for another week, Soledad would put the dodge on her folks. Give them a callback when she was pretty sure they wouldn't be home.
From her integrated cordless phone/digital answering machine Soledad erased the message from her mother.
Couldn't see it. Think about it.
You hold a magnifying glass over an ant on a hot day,
you can't see the sharpened sunlight that fries it.
So…
If a person has the ungodly-extra-godly- ability to refract the light collected by their retinas into focused shafts of intense heat, you cannot see the hot: death coming at you.
You can in movies.
In movies, people with heat vision are always lighting up the area around them with their death-beam eyes. But that's movies.
Movie audiences have to have their fleshy minds entertained for them. The excitement's got to be obvious.
In real life, feeling your flesh start to heat up when a fire-eyes freak looks your way: That's all the excitement you need.
But you always got extra excitement thrown in gratis.
In a parking garage in the Bridge, in the middle of a firefight with a fire-eyes, Eddi and her element got melting glass and warping metal and bursting tires and instant heat damage to everything that was in the general direction of where the fire-eyes looked.
Good thing: In a parking garage, there was ample steel for the element to put between itself and the fire-eyes' killer stare.
"Where is the iamb for the burnt offering?" the freak screamed.
Bad thing: All that cover made it hard for the element to get off a clean shot. They swapped fire for fire, but they couldn't drop the thing.
"Reload." came the call from Tipden.
A hail of .45 Colt auto covering fire was Eddi's response. It was her present for being upped to the element's point in Soledad's absence. The most ferocious handgun in existence. One of 'em. Didn't hardly feel enough in Eddi's hand. And to think her max dream had been to thread every freak she crossed with her pop's knife.
That she'd managed sharp-force trauma on any freak ever… Luck? A miracle? Stupidity.
Glass melting.
Metal renting.
Tires popping.
She wasn't going bitch, but Eddi couldn't put enough cover between herself and this freak.
"His word is in my heart like a fire, a fire shut up in my bones. I am weary of holding it in; indeed," the freak yelled, "I cannot."
"Reload," Eddi yelled.
Tipden and Allen picked up their rate of fire. Eddi crouched, popped the Colt's clip. Fed it another. She missed hefting an HK.
She sure as shit missed Soledad's O'Dwyer,
And she was up. She was firing. Three guns against a tire-eyes. Odds weren't hardly good. Three against one,
and the MTacs were getting pushed back.
"He makes winds his messengers, flames of fire his servants!"
That was… Even as she jerked her the Colt's trigger, signaled Tipden and Alien to drop back, Eddi was working to remember. Sundays. Church with her mother, her father. "Winds his messengers." "Flames of fire his servants." Psalms.
And if Eddi could dial her rage, up it went. She wasn't the most Christian person. Not even close. Never much cared for church on Sundays. But her parents, her father, tried to put. some God in her. Freak's acting like God had taken her
dad.
And now this one was spouting the Word? Unacceptable.
Bur. just about unstoppable. Eddi could feel the heat of the thing pressing closer.
Cutting closer. "Reload!" she yelled.
The freak just kept spouting pseudo-Bible, No reloading for him. No ammo out. No stovepiping, stoppages, jamming.
Just heat billowing. Steel bending. An Escalade sagged, bowed down before it.
The freak: "After me will come one who is more powerful than I, whose sandals I am not fit to carry."
Bad call. Eddi was starting to think she'd planned wrong.
"He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit…»
Planning wrong was gonna get her killed. Not so bad. She could take it. What made her feel like shit: Tipden and Allen were gonna get dead too.
She saw the concrete of a vertical support char. She saw Allen make a move as hot light punched its way through the side of a German car.
How, Eddi wondered, would Soledad have played it?
"And he will baptize you with fire! Revelation is coming! The truth will-"
The standing theory with freaks, the one few normals were ever hoping was proved otherwise, was that the vast majority of muties only owned one significant fetish. They had one superpower. And it would be a very bad day for the normal human race when freaks started developing a second ability.
For a split second the fire-eyes looked like it had suddenly acquired the ability to rent open its chest and spit its innards outward. Would've been a useless superpower had it been a superpower. In fact it was a one-ounce slug fired from Alcala's Benelli punching its way through the freak's front carrying a good-sized mass of the freak's back and spine and lungs and whatever else it could grab up before heading out its chest.
And then it was like the freak was rushing to scoop up what it'd ejected from itself. Making a quick move to avoid a spill like some guy who'd accidentally dumped his martini at a cocktail party. Really, he was just falling over. Crashing into the garage floor. Splashing into a puddle of his own insides.
The fire in his eyes was out.
The freak was dead.
And then there was this moment, this blessed moment that occurs only rarely and only when a call goes good.
When the freak gets dropped, there isn't an operator down and what's left of the element's screaming into a radio for a bus. After the guns quit talking in their particular vernacular there is just quiet. Calm, halcyon quiet that is a harsh counterpoint to the raging hell that existed in the same space an instant earlier.
It made Eddi think or realize that it was just that much or just that little between chaos and calm. An instant.
And then the quiet was gone.
Tipden was calling in an all-clear to Command.
Alcala, easing for the freak-the Benelli giving the body a stare-down-called for Eddi: "Dropped it."
"… Yeah… " Eddi's racing heart and spinning mind were a couple of gears that wouldn't sync.
"Dropped it, Eddi." Breathing hard. Words pitched between excitement and fear. Alcala sounded like a bull rider who'd just made his seven seconds. "Didn't even see me coming."
"Took your damn time."
"Only had one shot, wanted to make it count."
"Good call," Alien to Eddi. "Letting Alcala circle around like that."
Eddi to herself: It wasn't a good call. It was a gamble that turned out good. Most points would never hold a gun back against a freak. But she figured if three could keep it distracted, one could get the drop.
"Hell of a good one," Alien said, "for first time on point."
Alcala added: "Bullet wouldn't've called it any better."
She could see it. Beyond the dry prose of the perfunctory reporting in the Daily News, in the theater of her mind Soledad could see Eddi leading Pacific MTac-the element Eddi'd been elevated to point of upon Soledad's leg getting jacked-against a freak that could generate and discharge heat from its eyes. And they had taken it out sans casualty to the operators on the element, according to the Daily News. Usually, the News, the Times, local TV, didn't much bother reporting the details of warrants served on freaks, since warrants being served on freaks, no matter some flew and others spat fire, had grown over the years to be reasonably commonplace. Like gang shootings. Like politicians and their whores. Like Hollywood leading men getting outed. In this day and age what else was new?