Josie followed the crowd up to the edge of the tent city. She spotted a clear spot next
to the house. It would be fine for the nurses, but not for the patients. They might need
to move the device later so they could make sure the patients were clear and move
them off site.
They might need more than one of the devices she was thinking about making with
Zatanna.
“I think right here would be all right,” said Jane. She indicated a space next to the
door. “Anyone going on shift can be cleared. Anyone going off can be checked for
the growths when they are done.”
“We might have to move this so we can check the women to make sure they are clear
when Jack and I get done fixing people,” said Josie.
“We might need something smaller once we get started,” said Jane. “For now, all we
need is something to check the helpers. We can come up with other tools when the
moving starts.”
“All right,” said Josie. She frowned. “Moving all these women is going to be the
biggest thing we have done.”
“Missus,” said Beatrice from Josie’s band. “Sally said we can post a job on the board.
It will be up to the adventurers if they want to support us.”
“Thanks,” said Josie. “Post a note to say that we are looking for help and we will put
up a notice when we will start. We still have to secure the buildings for our sick.”
“I will,” said Beatrice. “Laura is talking to Sir Harp about his friend.”
“I’ll let Mister Warner know when I see him,” said Josie. “He might duck out without
stopping going by his history.”
“I understand,” said Beatrice. “Any word?”
“Jack and Mister Warner caught up with the Enterprise and made sure Matilda was
safe,” said Josie. “I’m waiting for them to come back here so I can express my
displeasure.”
“Don’t rip off her ear,” said Hilda.
“I will give her an appropriate punishment,” said Josie.
“I have to go, Missus,” said Beatrice. “There is a fee for the board posting. I already
told Sally you will cover it.”
“We will go by there as soon as we are done with the rest of this,” said Josie.
“Thanks, Bea.”
“You’re welcome,” said Beatrice before she cut the call.
“All right,” said Josie. “Let me get started with this. Anybody who has the growths
in them should step back until we start working. If you don’t want to do that, I
suggest you cover your nose and mouth with a cloth, and wash your hands while
working on these women. When we start moving these women out of here, we are
going to cure the nurses and helpers first, then the women. If things start getting
worse, tell Jane to call me back and I will come up with something on the spot even
if it is just ripping everything out with my bare hands. Okay?”
“The lump on my liver?,” asked Massa.
“If you have anything wrong other than the growths, I will fix that too,” said Josie.
“I’ll do everything at the same time.”
“Are we in agreement with this?,” asked Jane.
The women slowly nodded or said yes. Some of them looked like they didn’t want to
be around magic, but Josie and Jack had saved a lot of them from being tortured and
murdered. They were willing to give her the benefit of the doubt.
“Elaine, I need you to hold this paper and pen,” said Josie. She reached into her bag
and pulled out the items. “I’m going to have to copy Jack’s portable sensors.”
“In what way?,” asked Elaine. She took the paper and pen. She stepped back out of
the way.
“We need a sensor that will do a full body scan for the moment,” said Josie. “When
we get them set up somewhere else, we’ll need mobile units to check people to see
how they are doing. Medicine is a big branch of stuff where I am from, but Jack and
I don’t have a lot of training with that. Our watches are helping us to fix any sick or
hurt person we come across.”
“I understand,” said Elaine.
Josie decided she needed to plan the machinery before she did anything else. Once
she had a sketchy blueprint, she could use Zatanna to bridge the gap. Then she could
copy the thing into smaller devices to be carried around by the staff.
Josie wondered if Supergirl would help her with this. Jack was using Mister Fantastic
for his knowledge base. Could she do the same with the list of skills she gained from
the persona? It had given her a lot of options while she was in the air facing certain
death.
She called on the persona. She smiled. The pseudo alien gave her a list of ideas she
could use later if she wanted. She concentrated on the medical scanner she wanted,
comparing it to an MRI. She held out her hand for the paper and pen. She held the
paper against her leg and sketched everything down in a few seconds. She nodded
when she was sure she had what she wanted. She handed the paper back to Elaine so
she could switch bodies.
Josie called on Zatanna. She took the paper back and examined it for a moment. She
nodded at the drawing and list of needs. She could make a medical scanner that
worked like the security scanner from Total Recall.
She needed material to build her device. She could build it out of nothing but if the
air changed, it might collapse. She nodded at the thought that was how Jack did
things with his own magic user.
She grabbed a bush in decline off the paved walk. She exerted her will and it came
out of the ground. She placed the uprooted plant in front of the mansion’s side door.
She consulted her drawing. She wished the plant would become an arch in front of
the door.
She added in features, extending the sides of the scanner for three more feet. She
made sure to add a mana battery to keep it running off the energy in the air. She
stepped back and let the persona go when she was done.
The scanner came to life with a hum. It sounded like a large angry bee.
Josie walked around the scanner. She rubbed her chin. It looked good, but did it work.
She needed to test it. She decided to step inside and walk down the aisle. She reached
the end and heard a ding.
She probably shouldn’t have added a sound notification to the scanner.
“You have a problem with your liver,” said Jane.
“I used to drink a bit,” said Josie.
“Used to?,” asked Jane.
“I had to give it up,” said Josie. “Massa, would you walk through. We already know
what we should see when you are scanned.”
Massa walked through. She quickly went around the end to look at her own results.
The jargon was a bit much, but the picture matched the earlier one. She nodded in
agreement with the finding.
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“We need someone else to give us another reading,” said Josie. “Then I have to go
back to work.”
Hilda stepped through. Josie and Massa looked at the reading, then at the blonde
Amazon. She looked at their expressions. She wondered what was wrong. What had
they seen?
“Bad news?,” asked Hilda. She smiled. “Is my liver bad too?”
“I don’t know if you want to get into this right now,” said Josie. She glanced at
Massa. The other woman nodded in agreement. “I don’t know if this is good news for
you, or not.”
“This isn’t like you, Ear Ripper,” said Hilda.
Josie glanced around at the women in the crowd and stepped close enough to whisper
in Hilda’s ear. She stepped back as the taller woman reeled in shock. She handed the
Amazon her readout, indicating the relevant entry on the paper with her index finger.
“I haven’t been with anyone since Corle locked me up,” said Hilda. “Are you sure
about this?”
“I can check with Doctor Occult,” said Josie. “Do you want me to do that? It will
prove the machine is working right.”
“I want to make sure,” said Hilda.
“What’s going on?,” asked Jane.
“We’re making sure that the machine is working right,” said Josie. “Hilda will talk
to you about it when she’s ready.”
She called on Doctor Occult and ran her scan over Hilda. She nodded at the report the
scan gave her. The machine had been right. She hoped her friend didn’t take this the
wrong way.
“The machine is working right,” said Josie. She turned the doctor off. “How do you
feel?”
“I don’t know,” said Hilda. “I’ve never thought about this. I never thought this would
come up.”
“Do you want to hang out with us until you get things straight in your mind?,” said
Josie. “We still have work to do today.”
“I need to be alone for a bit,” said Hilda. “Thank you.”
“Don’t forget we’re there for you,” said Josie. “But don’t ask me about diapers. I
don’t know a thing about kids.”
“I can see that with your dangerous kids, Ear Ripper,” said Hilda. She hugged Josie.
“Thank you.”
Josie patted her back. She didn’t know what to say about this. She pulled away.
“The machine is working,” said Josie. “Go ahead and run your women through it.
Massa will be able to note any problems on the read out. Elaine and I have to deal
with the owner of the second building.”
Josie turned into Zatanna and called for a book of medical terms. She handed that to
the midwife. She turned the persona off.
“If you see something that doesn’t have a clear name,” said Josie. “You can look it
up and get an explanation.”
“You could change the world with this,” said Massa.
“If you didn’t know me, and Jack, would you risk it?,” asked Josie. She nodded at the
thoughts flowing across Massa’s face. “Look after things, keep Jane in the loop. As
soon as I can arrange for better housing, we’ll make a plan to do the rest.”
She turned and waved at Elaine to walk with her. They still had to go over to the
Endwright house and see if they could talk to the lord. If they could get that second
building, they could start moving people. They would have to come up with some
kind of wagon train so they didn’t have to use the transporters to move things across
the city.
“So we are going to Endwright?,” said Elaine.
“He was pretty sick, and his wife was deep in with the Montrose,” said Josie. “He
might not be able to see us. We can ask someone on the staff if we can get permission
to at least rent the building I want to look into. Anything else is anybody’s guess.”
“I don’t think you talked about this,” said Elaine.
“The wagon guy we let go ran to talk to their boss, Endwright’s wife,” said Josie.
“She was deep into the trafficking, but also in the landgrabbing part of their
operation. If she hadn’t tried to grab the Hole in the Wall, she would be on the back
burner. Instead she moved up to the number one slot with a bullet. Jack did something
to get the Lord back on his feet, and we let the staff take over.”
“And now we know he owns the second depot you cleared out,” said Elaine.
“I don’t think he knows it, and I don’t think the wife came by it honestly,” said Josie.
“I think she seized it and ran her operation out of it. And then I seized it. As far as I
know someone else from the Montrose might have moved back in without thinking
about where the women and their guards are.”
“And you will have to clear it out again,” said Elaine.
“That will be the easiest part of all this,” said Josie. “The hard part is a contract where
we, Jane’s House, own the building, and can turn away anyone who wants to take it
back from us.”
“I understand,” said Elaine. “This seems like a lot of work.”
“It’s that or give up the fight,” said Josie. “I’m not willing to do that.”
“What was wrong with Hilda?,” asked Elaine.
“She’s pregnant,” said Josie.
“Hilda is pregnant,” said Elaine.
“It’s a basic fact of human biology,” said Josie. “You do know how babies are made,
right?”
“I do,” said Elaine. “I just never thought of Hilda as a mother.”
“It’s not our problem until it becomes our problem,” said Josie. “When Hilda is ready,
we’ll probably have to be there in case she needs help.”
“I never considered children at the House,” said Elaine.
“I’m sure Hilda is just the first,” said Josie. “But some of the women there were hurt
badly. They may never get to where they can trust anyone again even with work.
Some of them were betrayed by their loved ones. That’s bound to leave scars.”
Josie checked her watch. She decided when it was full, she would use a bird to drop
them at the Endwright estate. They would check on Endwright, and ask about the
building. Then they would check the building itself to see what they should do to
clean it out for the beds they would need.
In the back of her mind, she had decided that Matilda, Aviras, and June would help
clean it out.
“Jack and Matilda?,” asked Elaine.
“They are helping June with Mister Warner and Aviras,” said Josie. “I expect he will
call back when he has news. I don’t know if the Society planned on June being done
today, or if they are going to wait the full three days of her trial before making a
decision.”
“Do you think they will take her on?,” asked Elaine.
“I don’t know,” said Josie. “I don’t even know if June is right for the type of things
we do. We help the helpless, Elaine. I never thought June would even try to do that,
but I could be wrong.”
“So she might take your places,” said Elaine.
“Only if we’re dead,” said Josie. “June might be older, but that doesn’t make her
better.”
Josie heard the ding of a full watch, and turned into Zatanna just long enough to send
a bird out to their destination. They arrived just outside of the gate. She opened the
lock and they strolled up to the door of the large house she and Jack had cut through.
She nodded at the fact that you couldn’t see any of the damage they had inflicted. Her
birds did good work as far as that went. She knocked on the door and they waited on
the wide porch.
When no one came to the door at the first knock, she changed into the Martian
Manhunter and knocked a little louder. She changed back to her normal self so she
didn’t scare whomever came to the door.
“That’s the strangest form you wear,” said Elaine.
“Martians,” said Josie. “Who knew?”
The door opened. The butler stood behind the door. Josie remembered him from when
she was throwing bullets through guys getting in her way. He remembered her too.
She could tell by the sudden tensing of his face, and the way he was about to shut the
door in her face.
“Hello, Jeeves,” said Josie. “I would like to talk to Lord Endwright.”
“We’ve been taking care of him as we promised,” said the butler.
“I’m not here about that,” said Josie. “This is a straight deal about a building he owns
that I want to buy. Is he okay?”
“He is doing better after what your friend did,” said the butler.
“Any problems?,” said Josie.
“We have had some visitors,” said the butler. “I turned them away.”
“All right,” said Josie. “I’m going to talk to Endwright. This is my business manager.
She will be ensuring that he gets the money if he agrees to sell, or just rent us the
place until we don’t need it any more.”
“I suppose you want to come in,” said the butler.
“Unless you want to wheel him out here so we can talk,” said Josie. She gestured at
the large porch. “I’m good either way.”
“Come in,” the butler didn’t look pleased as he stepped back. Josie was used to that.
They headed upstairs to where Endwright still laid on his bed. He looked better after
Jack’s treatment. He rested against a stack of pillows, clear eyes looking at the door
as the group entered the room. The butler went to stand between Josie and his boss.
That wouldn’t stop her if she wanted to do something, whether she used the watch or
not.
“Sir, this is Madam Witch and her business manager,” said the butler. “They asked
to talk to you about a building you own.”
“My name is Josie Fox,” said Josie. “This is Elaine Numera. I have a problem and
your name came up so I decided to talk with you before trying to find another
location.”
“Marl said my wife had poisoned me and my son,” said Endwright. “That two witches
had saved me because of a vendetta with her. He also reported that you had
extended a shield over me until I could look after myself.”
“Jack does that,” said Josie. She sat in a chair next to the bed. She interlaced her
fingers as she thought. “I have a lot of sick people that I need to house until I can cure
them and get them on their feet and back in the world. Apparently you own the
building I want to use for this. I would like to buy that building, or rent it for a fair
price until I don’t need it any more.”
“I have no idea of what was acquired while I was infirm,” said Endwright. He looked
at his hand as if he had tried to use it but it wouldn’t work like he wanted. “My
solicitors and accountants are filing a report for me. I will be glad to loan you the
building until I know what has actually happened to my finances.”
“We will pay you fair rent for it,” said Josie. “Elaine will write out the receipt for you.
Jane’s House will be handling the actual care of these people, so if you need
something, or want to talk to someone managing things, she is the one to go to.”
“Your friend didn’t have to help me,” said Endwright. “You could have just taken my
wife and nothing else.”
“We help the helpless,” said Josie. “That’s all that matters.”