"Allen, you're late! That latte better not be cold!"
Ah, words that are always a welcome addition to any morning. How I've missed you.
Of course, maybe I'm just too used to hearing the first part. The very concept of tardiness and I go way back, and I thought that after I became - well,
whatever I am now - I'd be able to put that terribly ironic reputation behind that me once and for all. Turns out that all my accident did was put a hell of alot more on my plate. It figures, but that's pretty much how my life is always gonna go, isn't it? Surpressing a wry smirk at the thought, I approach Doctor Thwane and hand him his beverage, retrieved at the last second once I realized that I was heading into the office without it. Hard to keep track of details like that when you're busy dispatching a gang of misfit youths from robbing a couple on the streets.
"Uh, far from it, sir. Had them make it fresh."
Thwane feels it in his hand, inspecting the styrofoam of the cup before taking a sip. The displeasure on his face catches me off guard, as he turns to me and points his wrinkly finger at my chest. I nearly squirm. He may be Head of Research around here, but that doesn't stop me from being continually creeped out by how much he looks like some mad scientist out of a movie.
"Decaf?! I told you to check it before you left! Had the neanderthals at the Coffee Bean hid their idiocy well when your predecessor was bringing me the drink, I'd deduct the cost of this from your salary!"
I simply shrug my shoulders.
"Sorry, I could have sworn I did. Won't happen again."
He hands me my list of chores - uh, tasks, that is - as he passes me into the main lab.
"It had better not! In the meantime, here are your projects for today. Do try and give them a more focused portion of your attention!"
By the time he disappears from sight, the smirk returns to my face, always taking a sabbatical whenever I'm in the prescence of the good Doctor. He's very no-nonsense, making it hard to stand his prescence - even if he is a brilliant chemist in his own right. The man wrote a thesis on the properties of nitrogen compounds that was honestly part of the reason I came to Horizon Labs. The paper read like it was written by someone who doesn't just understand the key points scientific research - he honestly seemed like he
loved them, giving us at least one thing in common.
Everything else is pretty much up in the air. On the other hand, I'm pretty glad to know that Thwane can't run faster than the speed of light. He'd probably spend all of his time harassing us with it.
Alright. First on the agenda, digitally copy down all of Doctor Singh's notes regarding the clean energy grant. Shouldn't take too long, since the representatives for Stark Industries did most of the heavy lifting. Who'd have thought it - the same company that turned their own CEO into a technological war machine also knows their stuff when it comes to scientific data. I think I owe Forrest twenty bucks for that one.
Second order of business is...
"Holy crap! Everybody come quick, some lunatic's on TV! You gotta see this!"
...apparently, going to be delayed.
"People of the United States of America, I am the Gorgon and I bring you a warning."
Silently, I follow everyone into the conference room as a crowd builds from the outside, hearing the broadcast as the volume's turned up. With the funding we got last year, Director Dyne was able to afford to install a couple of flatscreens in a few of the floors, so everyone gets a good look at the guy while he stares us down with plenty of grimace. Seriously, I thought Thwane was bad. This guy gives him a serious run for his money. Looks like something out of Game of Thrones.
"Your's is an arrogant and spiteful nation that consumes far more than its fair share of the world's resources. The burden you place on this planet has become unsustainable. Like a cancer you must be purged so that the body may live. In less than twelve hours my organization will detonate a series of radiological weapons in major cities throughout your nation. All those caught within range of these detonations will die painful deaths. Understand this: Your military cannot protect you. Your heroes cannot save you. Your only chance is to heed my warning and flee these cities while you can."
My eyes fixate on the people around me, as time itself begins to slow down for me again. Everyone's looking at eachother, visibly panicked and worried for what this means in Central and Keystone. Bad enough that we have to worry about the rising crimewave as it was, but now some madman with a grudge for the entire country is threatening to blow us away. I can definitely understand the paranoia that instantly begins to set in, even before the crawl with a list of cities starts.
Sure enough, towards the end, one of the twin cities pops up. Keystone City. We're in Central, but if it's a radiological weapon, there's going to be no such thing as a minimum safe distance within the confines of either town. Either during a demonstration or otherwise. Right as the group of scientists begin to murmur to themselves, with some heading directly for the elevators, I casually begin to stroll in the opposite direction.
Well, you may have just gotten to know me, Central. But I think you're gonna need my help for this one. This is a job for The Flash.
By the time I make it past the door leading out to the lobby, I take a deep breath and raise my left hand to my other. Taking the dial of my ring, I lightly twist it three times and hold it out towards the open air infront of me. A series of nomex particles come spraying out of it once the base pops open, and I smile to myself. I'll never know how I came up with the idea of hiding my costume in a ring, but thank god I did. I don't think I could stand to wear the thing under my clothes.
Manually building up the friction in my body, I race forward and reach peak velocity in a matter of seconds. The nomex particles build and expand, activated by the electrical current that ricochets from the precise patterns of vibration running through my skin. In lamens terms, static electricity is what does the trick, combining the particles into something tangible - something more solid and rigid. Five seconds later, and I've already slipped the completed uniform over my body.
Not bad at all, Barry.
Doubt your fashion sense is gonna impress The Gorgon, though.
Need to find that radiological weapon he was talking about. I've already reached the middle of 7th street, so any path I take from here should lead me to the most likely areas of a detonation site: The testing field, out by the airport. The Keystone National Guard. The desert beyond city limits. Any remote area of isolation that requires just a little bit of leeway and alot of discretion. They can't just go firing off in the middle of a street. Which, admittedly, would make this alot easier.
C'mon, Allen. Pick something! You can stop by all of those places in less than a minute!
This is no time to pick favorites!
*KRAK-THOOM!*
What in the HELL?!
I'm nearly knocked off of my feet by a sudden and powerful burst of lightning that touches down on the streets infront of me. Blinding and deafening me for a split second, I come to a sudden stop and begin to topple over myself on the pavement. Blood trickles down my nose, as electricity courses through me in a way I've never even felt before. And this is coming from a guy who's been struck by lightning at close range.
What just happened was statistically impossible and scientifically improbable. The skies were crystal clear a minute ago. And even looking up now, there are still no clouds to be seen. But during a day when it shouldn't have, lightning just hit me for the second time in a year. The first time didn't end so well.
The second, it seems, hasn't brought about anything nearly as...
"At last, All-Father! I have arrived!"
My eyes widen and my jaw drops, taking a glance at the last thing I expected to see in place of the steaming hot circle that appeared on the ground whenever the lightning hit.
Am I hallucinating this?
"Midgard! Tis a welcome sight from the tundra of Jotunheim!"
?!
Yeah.
I'm hallucinating this.