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Episode 65 ... from the Files of Hydrogen Guy Saving the world on a regular basis, and surviving assassination attempts by a seemingly endless list of mutated and/or demented supervillains, one gets the reputation, deserved or not, of being pretty tough. I'll admit I've become a lot more sanguine about these things than the average person - I mean, this year alone I've fought off an alien invasion, gone to Hell for a lobster, wrestled with a centaur in Alaska, headed off a faerie war and stopped a thirty-storey robot from trashing the capital - but there are still those things that terrify me. They might seem like little things to other people, but they don't know the whole story. I don't mean my well-known dislike of lobsters. That isn't fear, really, just a strong distaste based on past experience. I'm talking about how I cross the street to avoid pigeons, and how I've taken to avoiding Maple Ridge Square (where the things are thickest in the city) after dark, when I can help it. David is worse - he becomes nervous and close-lipped if he hears cooing outside the window, and sometimes panics when confronted by large flocks - but then, he saw things that I didn't. It began a few weeks after the Zxanxi incident. After that strenuous series of events, we both felt we needed a break from costumed crime-fighting, and so threw ourselves into our other work. David absorbed himself in various experiments in the basement of the Maple Ridge Institute of High Energy Physics, while I began a new series of computations and worked on writing some papers I'd been putting off. The start of September found us in London, where I presented a paper on some curious gamma ray effects observed in ferrous silicates under Mössbauer and hydrogen flux-beam spectroscopy. The details are fascinating but not important to the story. David was a co-author, and as we both found ourselves in need of a vacation, he attended as well. We decided to spend a few days in the old metrop once the conference wrapped up. Being a world-renowned theoretical physicist and superhero doesn't pay as well as I sometimes make it out to, so rather than spring for a hotel, we were staying with my cousin Evan, who at the time had a place across the street from Regent's Park. We spent the first day doing traditional tourist things - walking around gawking at buildings and statues, getting lost in the maze of side-streets, and making jokes about the chirality of British traffic, like -- Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin *rimshot* We agreed that whoever invented bitter was an unparalleled genius, and ordered two more. For dinner that night, Evan booked us a table at a pizza restaurant in Soho that featured live jazz. The pizza was superb, even if it did include a very English interpretation of the word "ham"; the trio was a pleasant surprise, although the pianist/guitar player confirmed all my lurking suspicions about the English male borne of "Bobbins" and "Austin Powers". We were just slipping into the cocktails between sets when my cousin brought up the Society. Evan Evans Jim Evans Evan Evans Jim Evans Marcolin Evan Evans Jim Evans Marcolin Evan Evans Jim Evans Evan Evans David gave me a look that was easy to interpret. I went through a Masonic conspiracy phase a few years ago after reading "Focault's Pendulum" by Eco. For four months, I saw Rosicrucian plots everywhere. One night I got David, myself, and another friend tossed out of a club for chucking strawberries at a maitre d' who was the spitting image of the Comte de Sainte-Germain. Ah, youth... Anyway, I could see David knew I wasn't going to turn this down, and wouldn't try to stop me. In retrospect, I wish he had. Jim Evans Evan Evans Jim Evans Marcolin At that moment, the band started up again. We didn't mention it again for the rest of the night, which kept rolling along until about 4:30 the next morning. The following day Evan needed to prepare for the evening's shindig, so after rising from the thick mists of slumber like a pair of the undead shortly before noon, David and I struck out into the City on our own. It was just as well, since professional courtesy required us to pay a visit to Grimsword. Although, as Dave pointed out, if he played true to archetype, you didn't visit Grimsword; he visited you. We spent what was left of the morning sampling gourmet hot beverages in our usual style along Carnaby street. Grimmy didn't show - he had to know we were in town, nothing escapes him - so we gave it up and moved on. I wanted to visit 221B Baker St. and pay homage, while David was more keen on visiting one of the local Dungeons. We split up and agreed to meet at Nelson's Column at two-thirty. That most famous address, which was now a museum devoted to the great detective who Sherlock Holmes, who had once lived there, was not far from Evan's place. The building itself was a fairly typical three-storey block of Victorian flats. As I stood in the entrance hall, looking up the 17 steps with two well-preserved gentlemen's hats on a hook just above my head, I felt the sort of thrill a baseball fan might feel walking onto the field at Yankee stadium. I stood perfectly still for several minutes, absorbing as much of the spirit of the place as I could. At last I broke through the trance and headed up the stairs. As I approached the sitting room, I wondered what Holmes would have from my steps. "A man of about six foot two, roughly a hundred ninety pounds, with sore feet; active but not especially fit; of a retiring nature but frequently driven by circumstance to boldness." Holmes' and Watson's bedrooms and the famous sitting room were all admirably recreated, complete with many famous artifacts such as Watson's bag and service revolver, Holmes' pipes and slippers, the correspondence pinned to the mantelpiece with a knife. The upper floors held display cases featuring items relating to many of their famous cases, and some waxwork recreations of some characters involved. I examined the whole thing carefully and reverently as I swam through Japanese tourists. At last I found myself alone, as I pored over an eerily life-like wax Moriarty. I was lost in a kind of half study, half reverie when a noise behind me indicated another presence. I glanced back, expecting to see the Japanese tourists had caught up with me again, but I saw no one. I was turning back to Moriarty, when I heard a grave whisper call the name of my alter-ego. Startled, I turned. Behind me was a life-size wax diorama depicting the great detective in apocryphal deerstalker cap and tweed cloak, apprehending the villain of "Shoscombe Old Place"; but "Holmes" was looking directly at me. He dropped the wax figure's arm and stepped forward. His mouth twitched briefly in a sardonic smile as I gaped. Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword So you try making small talk with Mr. Dark Champion of London. Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword Jim Evans Grimsword He took a business card from inside the cloak and handed it to me. Grimsword I glanced at the card, then back at him, with a raised eyebrow. Jim Evans The sounds of approaching footsteps signaled the return of the other tourists. Grimsword stepped back into place and resumed his pose in the diorama. Grimsword Jim Evans A couple wandered into the room, and Grimsword resumed his guise of a wax figure. I moved on and looked at the rest of the house. In my way back out, I looked in on the waxworks again, and wasn't at all surprised to a genuine wax figure where Grimsword had been ten minutes previously. I examined my fellow tourists closely, but he was clearly long gone. I arrived at Trafalgar a bit ahead of time and so loitered around for a bit, taking in the scenery. The square was awash with tourists and pigeons - I'd never seen any place so thick with either. After making a leisurely circuit and snapping a few obligatory pictures, I parked myself on the edge of a fountain and watched the wildlife. The tourists were milling around the square, chasing after their children, climbing on the various fountains and bits of statuary and taking pictures of one another. But the thickest thing around, as I said, was the pigeons. Huge flocks of them, so that in some places the square seemed to be a solid mass of bobbing grey heads. Every so often something would spook them, and the flock would rise into the air like an angry rug, causing nearby humans to duck for cover; then they would settle back down someplace close by, and resume the business of waddling, pecking and cooing. A few brave souls were feeding them bags of seed or bread scraps, and were being so mobbed by pigeons that I was actually a bit worried for them. Things were frequently on the verge of getting violent, as the birds vied with each other and their human benefactors for ever greater shares of the dole. Even then, there was something sinister about them - a great mass of dirty grey, diseased, misshapen creatures with beaks, talons, and parasites, like some subtle reminder of nature's seamy side penetrating into man's domain. Rats with wings, indeed. Icky, to coin a phrase. I spotted David and waved him over. We greeted one another with the usual bonhomie. Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans I gave him a run-down of my meeting with Grimsword. He seemed a bit put out. Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans I looked over my shoulder to find a pigeon with a rather grotesque club foot perched almost immediately beside me on the fountain. It was bobbing its head and staring at me in a particularly stupid way and hobbling back and forth. Its head was white with a streak of black down one side, and the rest of its body was a deep grey with the occaisional patch of white. Aside from the lameness in its foot, the other arresting characteristic was its eyes - bright, almost flourescent red, as opposed to the yellow or orange of most of the other birds. I shooed it off and it made a sort of offended squawking noise as it flew off. Jim Evans Marcolin We wandered off in the direction of the Strand. I wondered aloud at the Victorian habit of slinging statues on top of enormous columns, so that you couldn't actually take a decent look at them. Maybe that was the idea - to compensate for a poor sculptor or unaesthetic subject. Dave contributed his opinion in the form of a raspberry, then after a moments reflection admitted that there might be something in that. Nelson was acknowledged to have been no beauty pageant contender, and the Duke of York, who was perched on another obelisk on the far side of Piccadilly, was after all a peer. Marcolin Jim Evans A rack outside of a cigar shop caught my attention. Marcolin Jim Evans I spun the rack around, past the Smiths and the Wellingtons and so on, until I spotted the E's. I pulled out the Evans crest - a gold lion on a blue shield, surrounded by various gold and blue leaves. Another name not far away caught my eye. Jim Evans I held up a crest with featuring a dog of some kind on a shield with a red and yellow stripe. Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin He plucked one of the small plastic plaques off the rack and held it up. Jim Evans He shook his head and stuck it back on the rack. Marcolin Jim Evans I grabbed it and took the three inside the shop. When I came out a moment later, I saw David peering up at the building we'd stopped at with a puzzled look on his face. Jim Evans Marcolin I followed his gaze. On a ledge one storey above street level, the strange-eyed pigeon with the club foot was hooting possessively and looking back at us. Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin We strolled onwards in silence for a while, both of us consciously avoiding looking back. My mind moved on to other topics. Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans By the time we returned to Evan's flat around seven, he already had several people in the living room and was passing around hors d'ouevres. He pounced as we entered. Evan Evans Jim Evans Another Evan Evans Marcolin Evan Evans They were a varied mix of young and old. The ones named Doc and Pre seemed at least in their late fifties, and the one called Long looked younger than us by a few years. Jim Evans Marcolin Post Evan Rank Evan Doc Evan Jim Evans Evan Evans Doc Evan Jim Evans Doc Evan Rank Evan Doc Evan Marcolin Pre Evan Doc Evan Cab Evan Doc Evan Cab Evan Marcolin Doc Evan Jim Evans Marcolin Doc Evan The doorbell chimed. Evan Evans Doc Evan We attacked the bar, where I unearthed a decently opaque beer and Dave poured himself some kind of unpronounceable Scotch. We topped up the others for good measure while bantering back and forth, so that when my cousin and Doc returned with the new arrival, all were relaxing with full glasses. The man that Evan referred to as Old Evan had an aura about him that preceeded him into the room by several minutes. I'd never seen anyone like him before. He looked ancient, it was difficult to tell how old he was but it he couldn't have been younger than seventy. He walked with a stick of brass and wood, and moved his right leg stiffly; and his shoulders were slightly hunched. He stood several inches shorter than I, but his presence made him seem gigantic. His gaze was beady and flitted from person to person as he spoke, and he always had a look like he knew a joke at someone's expense that nobody else knew. The others rose to their feet as they entered, and they greeted each other warmly. My cousin directed the old gentleman towards David and me, and introduced us. Evan Evans Old Evan Marcolin Jim Evans Doc Evan Old Evan Doc Evan Old Evan P'toultru! All P'toultru! We drank. Marcolin Old Evan smiled. Old Evan Jim Evans Evan Evans Old Evan Marcolin Old Evan Jim Evan Old Evan Jim Evans Old Evan Marcolin Old Evan Cab Evan Doc Evan Old Evan smiled craftily. Old Evan Cab Evan Doc Evan Post Evan Pre Evan Old Evan Marcolin Old Evan Jim Evans Evan Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Old Evan Jim Evans Rank Evan Long Evan Cab Evan Old Evan Jim Evans Old Evan Jim Evans Old Evan Rank Evan Old Evan Jim Evans Marcolin Old Evan Just then the doorbell announced more arrivals, and Press Evan hurried off to urge drinks into their hands. As additional Evan Evanses swelled our ranks - by the time things were really swinging, there were eighteen of us - the entertainment devolved into Old Evan, Doc Evan and I trying to outdo one another with tales erudite, bizarre, and shaggily canine. And then David, as he usually does in these situations - he waits until I've gotten myself and the others properly wound up - topped the lot with a story about his late grandmother's priest, a Spanish-speaking ski-instructor and an alligator bag. When we'd finally recovered enough to speak, Old Evan sighed genially and declared that it was time to get to business. Press, who was sitting next to me, elbowed me significantly in the ribs, nearly upsetting my glass of port, for which I responded by smacking him with a canapé. Before the situation escalated, however, he and most of the other Evans disappeared into the back room. When they reappeared, David and I nearly had another laughing fit. The Society members had draped themselves in gray and white muu muu's and feathery capes. The Boxjamesque robes were embroidered in gold thread with various strange and vaguely arcane symbols and in various degrees of detail, signifying the advancement of the wearer in the Society's rites. Press Evan's robe was entirely white without adornment, and his head was covered by a simple cloth cap. Old Evan's outfit was the most ornate, and his elaborate hat seemed to represent some kind of taxidermic orgy of cockatiels. Instead of his stick, he was leaning on a brass staff topped with some kind of winged egg. He was carrying a lumpy cloth sack that made me extremely curious. We didn't have long to examine any of this, however, because almost immediately me, David, and the two other Evans who apparently weren't yet privy to the deeper mysteries were blindfolded. I protested enthusiastically, not wanting to miss what promised to be an utterly ridiculous ceremony, but we were told that the uninitiated could hear but not see the rites they would perform. We resigned ourselves to listening and attempting to drink while half-sloshed and blindfolded. The initiates started moving furniture around and assuming their positions. Old Evan called my cousin to come stand next to him. There was the flick of a lighter, and I could smell burning incense. Although I could give you an exact chemical analysis, I have no idea what kind it was - it was a musky, wild sort of smell, almost rotten, what you might expect the nest of a long-dead eagle to smell like. The ceremony began as the initiates began to hum - a low, bass rumble at first, which then rose to a steady drone of "AUUUUUUUUMMMMM". It grew for about a minute and a half, then abruptly cut off. Old Evan began speaking, his voice grave, in a language as strange to me as the incense - some kind of guttural Celtic with debased Latin cadence. I wondered if I was hearing the echoes of the ancient British tongue, spoken here before the Saxons started messing things up with their German dialects. Old Evan was laying out, speaking passionately as if to a congregation. Periodically there would be a clang or a clatter or some other noise indicating some ceremonial action being performed. The others would respond periodically, Kua! Kua! P'toultru! or some variation. Evan's neighbours must think something peculiar about the noise, I thought. Old Evan and my cousin entered a brief question and answer session. I heard something being placed on the coffee table that sounded heavy and a bit soft. Then there was a brief crunching and a squelching sound - it dawned on me that something organic was being carved into. I began to feel a bit of trepidation. The carving stopped with what sounded like a flourish, and then I heard my cousin declare "P'toultru cac mundas! Kua! Kua!" The others repeated this, and then there was the cacophonous ringing of a dozen or so hand-bells. The ringing continued, and the "AUUMM"ing started up again, interspersed with cries of Kua and P'toultru. It evolved into a kind of frenetic dirge, and then my memory grows hazy... Next, my blindfold was off, and David and I were struggling to pull ourselves off the couch. The others were standing around, drinks in hand, congratulating my cousin on his initiation, and asking us amused tones what we thought of the crazy rigmarole. There was no sign of any of the ceremonial ware, or that anything other than hors d'ouevres had been dissected on the coffee table. I found myself standing next to Old Evan, and he regarded me placidly. Old Evan Jim Evan Old Evan Jim Evan Old Evan David and I eyed him warily. Marcolin Old Evan smiled and turned to Long Evan, who had assumed a station at Press's stereo. He grinned lopsidedly at us and hit "play". A bold, saucy Latin number erupted from the speakers. Old Evan The mambo continued the next morning, in my head. I dragged myself out of bed just a few minutes ahead of Dave, and we convened wordlessly in the kitchen. Evan bounded in a half hour later. Evan Evans Dave said nothing. I was the conversational half of the partnership. Jim Evans Evan Evans Marcolin Evan Evans He dove into the pantry, and, before I managed to swing the large iron ball that had replaced my head around, I saw him measuring Worcester sauce into a cocktail shaker. A moment later he put a shot glass of dark, sinister liquid in front of each of us. Not being in the mood to argue, I drank it. It felt like a small shell had gone off in my mouth, but I'll admit that it wasn't long after swallowing the stuff that my head began to lighten and I felt the life returning to my limbs. Dave resumed blinking and sat up straight. Marcolin Evan Evans Jim Evans Evan Evans Marcolin Evan Evans Marcolin Evan Evans Marcolin He held up the empty shot glass. Evan nodded. Evan Evans I made tea and we then puttered about with some grilled cheese sandwiches. Ah, the glamorous life of a world renowned theoretical physicist. We had planned to devote the day to the British Museum, specifically to the mummies and buddhas. We set off after Evan returned - he declined to come on the grounds that he was allergic to museums. Roughly eight hours later, David and I were wearily riding the Central underground train from Tottenham Court Road to Oxford Circus. The Museum had deeply satisfied, as had its bookshop. However, it wasn't mummies and buddhas that I was dwelling on... Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans His forehead wrinkled in uffish thought. Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin The train came to a halt and we stepped off into the Oxford Circus station. Our route back to Evan's place required that we transfer to the Bakerloo line to Baker Street station. As we headed for the other line, I caught a glimpse of two familiar faces. I grabbed David's arm. Jim Evans We watched as they hurried down the platform and then head down the exit marked for the Victoria line. Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans I took off after them. Dave glanced briefly after the crowd heading for Bakerloo, then came after me. Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans Marcolin I gestured him to silence as we entered the passageway. We were in a pack of commuters, all heading for the same platform. Long and Cab were about ten people ahead of us. They didn't look back. The London Underground is quite unlike anything I've seen outside the subterranean lairs of certain supervillains. The route from one platform to another is rarely just a straight line. You find yourself climbing up and down stairs and escalators - sometimes several stories worth - and trekking through twisting corridors, until you're not sure exactly where you are with respect to street level. In many cases, the stations themselves are a hundred to a hundred and fifty years old. There's a strange, half-medieval, half-urban atmosphere to them. It's like a real life game of Nethack. We followed them down a flight of stairs and around several twists and turns. They made no unusual movements. As they stepped into a slightly wider passageway, they seemed to start moving faster. We kept pace with them, Deuterium Boy - I mean, David - still giving me these sideways glances of annoyance. Then as another narrow corridor met our wider one, and two streams of people converged, we lost them. I stopped and peered back down the other corridor, as people pushed passed us and muttered. I was just about ready to give up and turn back when I noticed what looked like a service door a few feet back in the narrower corridor. I hopped over the rail separating opposing streams of travelers and headed for it. When I reached the service door, I was initially disappointed. It was covered in the same uniform grime as the rest of the walls, and was sealed by an ancient padlock which looked like it hadn't seen a key since the Blitz. Marcolin I was about to admit defeat when I spotted the second seam. It had been designed to blend in with the grouting on the tile walls, and the grime helped to conceal it. I felt around for a loose tile. I found it just above the proper door's lower hinge and pushed. The second door, set within the first one, slid smoothly open. I ducked inside without looking to see what I was stepping into, and David followed. The hidden door sprang silently back into place. We were in a passageway that looked almost identical to the one we had just left, only dustier, emptier, and darker. Where we stood was almost pitch dark, there was just a faint glow coming from somewhere in front of us - a torch that Long and Cab had carried, no doubt. I created a small globe of hydrogen from the ambient water vapour and set it alight. I saw David looking at me disgustedly. Jim Evans Marcolin Jim Evans I turned down the flare and we hurried to keep sight of the retreating glow ahead. I wished I'd brought the Ruler of Elendil - if we got into trouble, we'd have to rely on our wits and native Elemental abilities to get back out. The passageway sloped gentle downwards, then curved around a corner. The tiling gave way to bare stone just past the corner. We could hear the sound of a train passing by slightly above and to our right. We caught sight of the two Evans2 about a hundred feet ahead of us. They still seemed unaware they were being followed. A strange smell tickled my atomically sensitive nose. It was vaguely familiar, I had smelled it just the day before in large quantities, but I couldn't quite place it. The stone corridor continued stretching straight ahead and down, and Long and Cab kept walking wordlessly ahead of us. Then without warning, they turned sharply to the right, and my heart dropped as I heard a heavy stone something grind into place. When we reached the spot they had turned, we could see that a carved capstone had been rolled into place behind them. The corridor came to a dead end a few meters past it. I brightened the hydrogen flare a bit and peered at the capstone. It was circular and about seven feet in diameter, like a giant manhole cover. Most of the carvings were geometrical. A fringe of short parallel lines ran around the edge, and then a pair of concentric circles nearer the centre. Right in the center of the stone was carved some kind of animal. Or bird, rather. Or -- well, it was hard to tell. It looked a bit like a griffin, in that it was both bird-like and not a bird, but it was nothing I'd seen before. It seemed to have a lower body something like a squid - lots of tentacles. Only some of the tentacles weren't tentacles, but legs with talons. And the main body was of some plump bird outspread wings, and as the creature visited destruction on the landscape the artist had placed it in, it had a singularly stupid expression on its round little head... That's when I identified the smell. Marcolin Jim Evans He tested the air. Marcolin Jim Evans We turned around just as we heard the cooing. I raised the flare. A few feet in front of us was a single pigeon, wandering seemingly aimlessly in little circles. It was mostly grey with a few splashes of white, and its head was white with a streak of black down one side, and one foot - its right - was deformed. Marcolin Jim Evans The pigeon let out one long coo, and then, as its body began to swell and transform, the sound mutated into a low chuckle. The club-footed pigeon was gone; in its place stood Old Evan Sion Evans, leaning on his brass and wood stick, and blocking the passage back. Old Evan Marcolin Old Evan Jim Evans I pitched the hydrogen flare at him and got ready to make a run for it. He waved his stick in front of his face, and the flame dispersed. Old Evan He pointed the cane at the door behind us, and the stone rolled aside. Pigeon-scented air gusted past us. Old Evan We didn't know the extent of his power, so we silently agreed to do as he said for now. If he was a warlock on the order of Griff Pedros Pedros Dumnoric or Savadini, we were in trouble. I had a hunch his powers were more limited, but it wasn't wise to take the chance. We stepped through the door. The passageway here was lit by torches set in the wall, and the stone of the walls became rougher. Old Evan stepped through after us and the capstone rolled back into place. He took a torch from the wall and held it above his head. Jim Evans Old Evan I shrugged and started off. We went single file, David behind me, and Old Evan shuffling alhich to deal. You are very fortunate indeed, Mr. Evans. And very foolish. Mr. Marcolin, you have your work cut out for you. Marcolin I could tell from his tone that Dave thought I'd over-extended myself. Maybe I had, but hopefully Old Evan would now be more disposed to talk. It turns out I was correct. Old Evan Jim Evans Old Evan Jim Evan Old Evan Jim Evans Marcolin Old Evan We were drawing near the end of the passageway. Ahead we could see where the leftmost wall of the passage stopped, and the path continued alongside a great pit. The noise I had taken to become a motor was much louder, and was coming from the pit ahead. A faint glow of daylight was coming from that direction, as well. We stepped out of the passage just as Old Evan finished his speech, and were instantly struck dumb with horror. The noise was not a motor, but the cooing and warbling of thousands, millions of pigeons. The pit looked almost a full above-ground storey deep, and it was perhaps two hundred feet across. There was no ceiling; the cavern stretched hundreds of meters above us, like a sunken chimney, and was open to the sky above. Pigeons were flying up and down this vertical space unendingly, and the floor below was a seething grey mass of live birds. The stench was unbearable, and the noise... I made some sort of half-coherent noise and sank to my knees. It obviously wasn't what Old Evan wanted to hear; I felt him shove me from behind, and I tumbled into the pit. I still had enough of my sanity to use my hydrogen powers to slow my descent, so that I landed softly on my hands and knees. I instantly sprang to my feet, hopelessly trying to avoid the pigeons. I saw David come tumbling after me, and he too managed to control his fall and save his life momentarily. Of Evan Sion Evans I could see no sign - he had transformed back into the deformed bird and vanished. I struggled towards David as the birds began to attack. I fought the off in a panic. David and I reached one another halfway and clung on to each other. Through the chaotic storm of birds flying up around us, I glimpsed what I thought could be our salvation - at the far end of the pit was what looked like a large circular portal, maybe 100 feet across. Obviously there was no way I could ever move a stone door that size, but in my maddened state I thought it was our only hope. Clutching David by one arm I started dragging him across the pit, fending off the birds trying to attack my face with the other arm. I shut my eyes and moved blindly forward, towards that door. Suddenly, David started to resist. He was thrashing about, as if trying with every ounce of strength to stop me from heading for the portal. Later I vaguely remembered a sound like him screaming. We struggled with one another, and then, somehow, I felt myself dissolving. Then, darkness. When I came to my senses, I was sitting in a jail cell, wearing nothing but an itchy police blanket. David was sitting nearby, similarly attired. Looking at my arms and legs, I saw they were covered by numerous scratches and punctures. My cousin Evan bailed us out not long after - it was the day after our expedition in the Underground. Apparently a police officer had found us lying comatose and entirely naked in Piccadilly Square. When he succeeded in waking us up, we had been completely incoherent, raving about caves and pigeons and dark unspeakable evil. The bobby just nodded and bundled us into a police wagon. As I'd discovered, we were both covered in minor injuries, which the police were at a loss to explain. We were released with a very stern warning about controlled substances, but no charges were laid. We returned to Evan's apartment, then immediately packed our things and left. We gave no explanation - partly because we didn't have much of one ourselves. I still had the card with Mrs. Hudson's address on it, and we went there. She was not, as it turned out, a dour Scottish housefrau, but a very nice woman near our age who ran a daycare. She was happy to let us stay with her as long as was necessary. I tried to piece together what had happened in that cavern, but Dave was entirely unwilling to discuss it. The best I can do is this - for some reason, he wanted to prevent me from reaching the huge portal, and after failing to stop me physically, finally remembered his deuterium powers. He transformed himself into deuterium gas, and since we were locked together, I transformed into a cloud of hydrogen - we have this affect with another, and Helium Girl, that we can trigger each other's transformations by physical contact. In gas form, we left the cavern through the same exit the pigeons were using, the one straight up. How we ended up in Piccadilly, and why our clothes didn't re-materialise with us, I never figured out. Why David took such a dislike to the portal I didn't find out until some days after we got back to Maple Ridge. He was unusually withdrawn and reticent during that time, until suddenly, the more public horror of world events seemed to shock him out of it. It was in the cozy darkness of Django Djava that he finally told me. Deuterium Boy Hydrogen Guy Deuterium Boy Hydrogen Guy Deuterium Boy He took a reassuring sip of caffeine and shuddered. Deuterium Boy [fade to black; roll credits] |
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