From the case journal of Sef Smith, a.k.a. The Slave, leader of Last Defense.
Picking up the pieces
I was getting my shackles on when she showed up at Atlas Park headquarters. She was wearing black slacks with suspenders and a gun holster, and a short-sleeved white dress shirt with a black tie. Looked Armanish. Leave it to an Italian superhero to make the rest of us look like dorks.
I haven't figured out yet why she decided to join Last Defense. She seems pretty uptown, and anyway, for what I hear she could take on some of the really powerful threats. But here she is. I told her we were going down to a shelter in Kings Row. They've had visits from Skulls the last week, and their clientele has been afraid to come there since. Which means they're hanging out in alleys and backyards and doorways, which isn't helping any. Usually we show up in force, people see us and the shelters are left alone for a while. I told her it'd be a good way for her to see the areas we operate in and get a feel for how we do things. I can't stop thinking of her Armani outfit down there in the slum. I hope she's not afraid to get it wrinkled. But beggars can't be choosers, and with just the three of us, we sure as hell can use her on the team.
Walking towards the shelter, a big, red sedan passed us, honking, and clipping a trash can on the sidewalk. Skulls. Laura looked at me but I shook my head.
"They know we're here. They won't make any more trouble." I glanced over at Ferrari, walking in front of me, but she was talking to Bjorn, like nothing had happened.
Something was funny down by the shelter. Instead of the usual group of people smoking and chattering in front of the doors, there were two punks in leather jackets with Skull markings guarding them. They watched us calmly as we approached. Much too calmly. Before I had time to say anything, one of them spoke.
"This is the wrong day for you to come visiting, pops. Just go back home." His smile was much too big.
"Yes? Why is this the wrong day? You better not have hurt any of the people in there."
"As the man says, just leave, or there'll be trouble," he scoffed.
I grabbed his collar with one hand and lifted him towards me. His friend backed up and disappeared through the shelter doors.
"Now I think you're right. There will be trouble." I'd been waiting for that knife since I came up to him. I stopped it with my chain, put my hands together and swung it, hitting him on the chin and throwing him back against the wall. Then I wrapped the chain around his arm and yanked just enough to hear the wrist snap, the knife falling to the ground. We can't let ourselves be threatened by punks down here, or we'll be useless. I grabbed him around the throat.
"Now you will tell me why this is the wrong day for us to visit, or I will make you uglier than you are. What the hell is going on? Where are the people who live here?" I wrapped the chain around my fist and lifted it over his face. Warm metal closed around my arm.
"No." It was Ferrari.
"No? No what?" I snapped. "What? You have no idea how things work here, lady. We don't deal with white-collar crime. We're not fighting some international crime syndicate! We're fighting the very grime and misery of this city. You have no idea what kind of edge we're standing on. Now let me do my job!"
"I know one thing." She looked at me calmly with those white, fluorescent eyes. "All I see around here is victims."
She was right of course. This kid's parents, if they are alive, probably live in some other shelter close by. Even the apartments aren't much better in this neighborhood. I pushed him away.
"I guess we'll have to find out for ourselves," I said, kicking the door open.
Obviously, they were waiting for us, fingers on shotgun triggers. I leapt behind a desk in a cloud of dust and wooden splinters. It wouldn't last long in this barrage. I peaked over the edge and looked around. Laura was nowhere to be seen. Good. A second later, one of the shooters was hit in the face with his own rifle. Bjorn was staring down the gunfire, trying to decide who to take on first. I waved to Ferrari who was efficiently putting bullets in non-lethal but painful places.
"Are these Skulls?" she asked, frowning.
"Don't look it to me," I yelled back. "Too neat, too good with the guns. Damn, we came here to make an interview, not fight the battle for Paragon City!"
"Yeah...Let's take a closer look at the back rooms. You ready?" I glared at her.
"Miss, I've been ready since before you were born. I could be your great-great-great-great-great-great... whatever."
"I know, I heard. Let's go."
"I mean, if you were human," I added.
That's when the far wall came crashing down. There was a whirring of servo engines, and a shadow in front of us almost filling the hole in the wall.
"What the hell is that?" Laura shouted from somewhere in the room.
"Armed and armored hydraulic exo-skeleton, modified army standard issue." Ferrari reciting the manual.
"We can take it," Bjorn growled, throwing an unconscious shooter down among the trash.
"Are you fire proof?" Ferrari asked. "Those are flame throwers." The remaining hoodlums were scrambling for their weapons and scurrying out through windows and back doors.
"Not too good with fire," Bjorn said and backed away.
"Just get out of here." Ferrari flicked away her cigarette and put her revolver back in the holster. "Get out right now!" I hesitated for a second, until I noticed the muzzles of the machine's flame throwers turn towards us. The last thing I saw before leaping through the door was Agent Ferrari walking towards the exo-skeleton, and whoever was in it. As I hit the ground outside, the windows shattered above me and glass shards and flames filled the air. When I looked up I realized the gangsters had us surrounded. Bjorn was mowing through them like there was no tomorrow. I had had enough of lying down for one day and joined the fray. As long as I stayed up close, they didn't have a chance. Behind us we could hear explosions and heavy gunfire, and the building was in flames.
A few minutes later the mobsters were all down. Laura was back among the visible and Bjorn was sitting down on the curb. We still heard the odd shot from inside the burning building. Then Ferrari appeared in the doorframe. She was covered in soot and her clothes were hanging in smoking pieces from her body. She had an old man under her arm.
"Help me! There are people in the back!" Fire truck sirens filled the air.
The bad guys had been booked and taken away. The people from the shelter were being looked over. They would live, it seemed. Ferrari had somehow managed to keep the fire out of that one room. It was under control now, though the shelter would have to move. But they were used to that. Agent Ferrari was talking in a communications device.
"I know. Just lucky I guess. I would never have thought I'd find him this fast. Yes, I'm sure it's him. I'm sure, and all the stolen equipment has been identified. Don't worry about it. Yes, see you later." The device went back in her belt. She smiled at me sheepishly while tearing off the charred remains of her clothes, just leaving some sort of fireproof training suit covering her red metal torso.
"I guess you won't be coming back with us to headquarters," I said.
"I'm afraid not." She sighed. "You know, got international crime syndicates to fight?"
"Right." I looked away.
"I'm sorry. If I'd known I'd find him this fast, I'd given you a heads up. But I couldn't tell you."
"I get it." I looked over at the others. "We really should be going..."
"Sef." I looked at her, and her white, fluorescent eyes looked back at me. "If you ever need help, with anything, you just give me a call, okay? I'm serious."
"I know you are, Ferrari." I shook her hand.