“We should be at Fluke’s,” said Patty as she drummed her fingers on the dashboard
of Kathy’s Chevy. “Crenshaw isn’t going to attack here.”
“How do you know that?,” asked Kathy. “We have a one in three chance of being in
the right place.”
“He’s going after Fluke’s.” Patty shook her head. “And Dr. Hadron snatched that up
from us.”
“So you think Crenshaw is going to hit Fluke’s?” Kathy raised an eyebrow. “If you
want, we can drive over an check on the old man to make sure he’s okay.”
“Let’s do that.” Patty frowned. “I know I’m right. I can feel it.”
“He’s going to be mad if Crenshaw hits this place while we’re driving across town.”
Kathy started the engine. She pulled away from the curb and joined the push of
traffic.
“The air is too clear.” Patty waved her hand. “He’s not hitting here. Not today.”
“If he were hitting, you would see something?” Kathy went around a slower moving
truck. She wanted a light to put on her dashboard. That would help clear traffic out
of her way.
“The air gets foggy.” Patty frowned. “There’s a wind effect.”
“I think you should tell Jean and Lin in case we need them.” Kathy turned right and
paused the car at an elderly woman in the road. She started driving as soon as the
woman followed her walker out of the way.
“You’re right.” Patty pulled out her phone. “If we can get them moving now, they’ll
be in time to back us up.”
“If Crenshaw doesn’t hit either one of our locations while we’re following feelings.”
Kathy sped up to get through a hole left by slower moving automobiles.
“I would have felt better if we could have gotten something faster than cars,” said
Patty as she triggered the call function.
“Go ahead,” said Jean. She sounded bored.
“We’re heading over to the Fluke’s,” said Patty. “Anything going on at your spot?”
“We’re clear.” Jean didn’t sound bored now. “I don’t see a cloud in the ether.”
“Hook up with us at the Fluke.” Patty brushed hair out of her face. “I think that’s
where Crenshaw will attack.”
“All right.” Jean didn’t say anything else before the line went dead.
“I have shark.” Dr. Hadron’s voice broke in over their phones. “I have one shark fin.”
“Okay, so your feeling was right.” Kathy poured on the gas, cutting traffic off as she
blew through lights. “I need a siren for this.”
“Don’t kill us.” Patty reached behind her. She grabbed her carbine and lamp. She
plugged the weapon in as the buildings flew by in a blur.
“Get mine ready.” Kathy caused a lot of horn blowing as she sliced around a slower
moving van. “I need to be ready to go.”
“Got it.” Patty pulled the long gun out of the back and plugged it into its own lamp.
The ready light on top turned green.
Sirens warned them that the police were not happy with their speeding. Kathy glanced
in the mirror. She shook her head.
“Don’t stop,” said Patty. “We don’t have time to explain things.”
“We’re going to have to do something,” said Kathy. “They’ll try to pit us eventually.”
“Let me call Jean.” Patty pushed the contact button. “If we stop, we have to make sure
someone is helping Dr. Hadron.”
“It won’t matter if we can drive three blocks.” Kathy pointed. Blue flames lit the sky.
“That’s our doc.”
“We’re almost there, Jean.” Patty looked at the trails of flame. “Where are you?”
“About a mile out.” Jean sounded strained. “We’ve hit a traffic jam. Lin is looking
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for another way around on her phone.”
“We’ll try to hold him until you get there.” Patty hung up. “It looks like we’re on our
own.”
“Let’s see what we can do.” Kathy veered into an alley, cut across a lot, and slid
around a car double parked on the street. She turned right and hit her brakes. “We’re
here.”
“This is bad.” Patty jumped out of the car. She slung her carbine over her shoulder
so she wouldn’t lose it. The lamp hung from her belt on a carabiner. Its blue fire
danced fitfully.
Kathy got out the other side, dragging her weapon with her. She hung her lamp on her
belt as she looked at the scene.
“This is kind of worse than I thought it would be.” She raised her rifle. “It’s been nice
knowing you.”
“We’re winning this.” Patty raised her rifle. “Shoot the sharks.”
“No problem.” Kathy smiled as she cut loose at the school of glowing green fish.
Some of the ghosts, the smaller ones, popped like bubbles under the surprise
onslaught.
Patty took a moment, looking for the right thing to shoot.
The company van sat across the street from Fluke’s. Various cars hugged the curb on
both sides, giving cover for both sides at the start. The front of the store was missing
some of its brick and glass. The van had holes chewed in it. Dr. Hadron blasted away
while he used the driver door as a partial shield. Pedestrians fled in all directions.
Crenshaw hovered over the battlefield on the back of a shark, directing his minions
with his sword. He laughed at his enemy’s certain doom.
The laughter stopped when Kathy started shooting. He turned to glare at the two
women. He could still fight on two sides.
Patty shot him in the head. She barely had to aim before she pulled the switch. The
ghost lit up like a cartoon electrical shock gag before he hit the ground in a cloud of
smoke.
“Keep shooting the sharks.” Patty blasted two aiming for her before they could try to
veer away from her blasts. “We have to make sure he can’t gain strength from them,
or spread the damage around so he can keep fighting.”
“Got it.” Kathy shot through a cascade, bagging a few with that one blow. Her lamp
ticked a little to indicate it was getting full. She might have to dump it in the middle
of the fight if she kept blowing up her enemies.
She hoped she didn’t lose her car over this. The sharks would try to bite through the
metal and plastic to get at her. She didn’t plan to let that happen.
Patty stepped forward, shooting holes through any of the sharks in her way. Some of
the bystander cars suffered wounds as the fish reacted in a frenzy. Some of them
turned on her with empty eye sockets. She kept firing to give them something to chew
on.
Dr. Hadron kept to the van. Every shot cleared a phantom away from him. He reached
into the van and pulled out a set of eight storage lamps with one hand. He put that on
the ground as he waited for the right chance to drop Crenshaw.
“I’m tired of you meddlers.” Crenshaw stood. He grimaced as he floated off the
ground. “You should have stayed in New York, Hadron. It’s time for you to join your
friends.”
“You’re going to have to deal with me first,” said Patty. She shot at him, but one of
the sharks dove in front of the bolt. It kept flying, but there was a hole through it.
“I don’t see why not.” Crenshaw pointed his sword at her. “Have at her.”
All the sharks turned to face Patty as they cruised through the air. Rotten teeth
revealed themselves. They swarmed in with mouths wide open.
Patty backed up, firing as she went. Holes appeared in the ghosts as they came on.
She was going to get her head bitten off. She could see it. Maybe she shouldn’t have
persuaded the others to help her get the real Lamplighters involved.
Dr. Hadron fired from the side, punching hole after hole, busting smaller fish. He
hefted the lamps in one hand as he walked over. His other hand held his weapon and
pushed the activating button without too much trouble.
Kathy fired from the cover of her car. She wasn’t leaving it to be chewed up by
Crenshaw’s fishes.
She still had a year’s worth of payments on it.
Sirens preceded the appearance of four of San Francisco’s finest. They got out of their
cars with guns drawn. They looked at the flying sharks and took cover.
Some of the sharks broke off and smashed through the light bars and roofs of the
police cars. One of the policemen stared at the damage and burst into screaming
expletives in the air. He turned and shot at the sharks with bullets. Nothing happened
except one of his targets turning to do a charging bite on his head.
Kathy blasted it with a half turn and trigger pull.
“Get out of here!” Kathy waved her hand at them. “Go write tickets.”
A SUV arrived at the other end of the street. Jean jumped out from behind the
steering wheel. She turned. Lin handed her the multiple barrel device she had picked
as her weapon. Blue flames cut through the air.
Lin dropped down behind her. She grabbed her own carbine and shot at any shark that
came close. Their surprise appearance cut a swath through the school.
Crenshaw grabbed one of his sharks by the dorsal fin. It carried him along. He
whistled for the rest of his monsters to join him in retreat.
“You don’t get to walk away.” Patty shot his ride until it found itself confined in her
lamp. “I’m done chasing your dead butt around the city.”
She walked forward. Blue flames drove the sharks away from her as she advanced.
Crenshaw jumped to his feet with his sword in hand. He stabbed at her as she pulled
the switch on her blaster. His sword broke into pieces as the fire ate at his body.
Patty ignored the sharks around her. They weren’t important. Their leader was. He
had to go to stop the damage they caused incidentally to their robberies. She poured
on the blue flame, soaking him in it.
Other streams of blue energy joined Patty’s. They ripped Crenshaw into pieces as he
was converted into psychic energy and captured in the various lamps. He screamed
as he went.
The green fog lightened as the Lamplighters readied to deal with the remaining
sharks. The glowing fish slipped out of sight, becoming one with the ether. The mist
boiled away.
“Which one of you want to explain this to the cops?” Dr. Hadron gestured at the
policemen still hiding behind their police cars.
“I’ll do it.” Patty slung her rifle. “How hard can it be?”