Scene 4 - November 5th
Interior Testing Facility, Continuous
Quinn Kaufman
Eventually, I heard a polite clearing of the throat, and opened my eyes to see two people in front of me - a muscular black man not much taller than me in a skintight suit cut in a similar style to the PA4, and a taller, somewhat lighter-skinned black woman with braided hair, a lab coat, and a clipboard.
“Miss...” she glanced at her clipboard. “Sorry, Mx. Kaufman? Is that right?”
I nodded, standing. “Yes. I’m nonbinary, I use they/them pronouns, so... Mx.”
“I’ll do my best,” she said - she seemed to have a bit of an accent - Italian? I supposed that New Venice had a substantial Italian population - perhaps she was biracial. “You’re the first person I’ve met who uses they/them, so I can’t promise perfection, but...”
“If you’re making an effort, that’s all I can ask,” I assured her.
“So, Mx. Kaufman. I’m Dr. Anomnachi, a specialist in metahuman research,” she said, offering a hand, “but you can call me Isabella, or even just Belle if you prefer. I don’t tend to stand on ceremony.” Italian first name, and what I thought was a Nigerian last name - that supported the biracial theory. She jerked a thumb at the superhero next to her. “This is Starling.”
“Quinn,” I told her, shaking her hand. “I don’t either. I barely recognized you without the cape,” I said to Starling, offering him my hand. He scowled as he shook it, but didn’t say anything.
“He’s grouchy because his cape is malfunctioning - it helps him fly - and he’s not terribly friendly at the best of times,” Belle said. “Don’t take it personally.”
I nodded. “Alright. You’re here to test my powers, then?”
“Mhm,” she hummed, glancing over the clipboard again. “I work with the DMO a lot to run these powers tests, but you probably won’t see much of me unless you’re acting as a safety officer for a test - that’s what Starling is here for.”
He grunted, taking a seat on the bench I had vacated. “You’d better not actually need me, I’m trying to figure out what went wrong with the cape.” He removed a short baton from his belt - his vaunted tech-staff, a thousand different tools all in one gadget - extended what appeared to be a holographic screen from it to turn it into a tablet, and began examining a set of blueprints.
“Once I’m done, you’ll have more contact with Dr. Rogers - he’s the lead physician for New Venice’s MLED agents,” she continued. “Now, introductions over - let’s get started, shall we?”
I allowed the testing to blur by, for the most part. Dr. Anomnachi may not have stood on ceremony, but she didn’t mess around when it came to her work. She briskly ran me through a series of tests to check if I had beyond-human abilities in any way other than the ones I had noticed - from strength to toughness to speed.
None of them turned up anything, unsurprisingly. I didn’t seem to have any powers other than the two I had discovered on my own. The testing for those powers, though, did bring me out of my funk and back into the present.
“I see you reported a sort of radial ESP,” Belle said, tapping her clipboard. “Tell me more about that.”
“Extending in all directions from me, there’s an area in which I have massively enhanced sensory input,” I said. “It plugs into my proprioception by default, letting me feel and understand the location, shape, and momentum of everything in my radius, but I can shift it to other senses if I try. Doing that inhibits all other senses to almost nothing, though, while using it with proprioception doesn’t.”
She made a few notes. “Perhaps you’re directing all your senses into just one, not the ESP alone. Might be worth experimenting with. What is it like for other senses?”
“Vision lets me see everything within the radius, which... doesn’t seem super useful, to be honest. Seeing in, effectively, all directions is cool,” I said, nodding to Starling - omnidirectional sight was one of the many enhanced senses that he had, “but it doesn’t tell me much that the proprioception doesn’t except for color. Audio gives me something approaching echolocation, because with such a wide area to pickup sounds from, I can hear things that are much fainter, and to a greater fidelity.”
“Interesting.” She frowned at the board for a moment, then stared at me as though I was a puzzle. “And your telekinesis operates only on the same radius?”
“As far as I’ve observed, yes. If it’s not in my ESP, I can’t affect it.”
“Hmm. Why do you call it radial ESP?”
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“Isn’t all this on your board already?” I asked.
“The board has only the most basic information,” she said. “Even if it didn’t, I prefer hearing from the person themself - themselves? Well, whichever. It tells me what it’s like for you, which I find more helpful in these tests than interpreting what some clerk thought you meant.”
“Makes sense,” I agreed. “I call it radial because it seems to extend outward from me as though I’m radiating it. The farther something is from me, the more faintly I can sense it, and if there’s something behind what I’m sensing, I can’t feel that at all.”
“Hmm... I have some ideas for tests.”
She had lots of ideas for tests. After confirming that the ESP was present, and that it was fine enough at close range to let me operate completely blindfolded without difficulty, she began testing the limitations of it.
A closed window confirmed that it was stopped by any solid object, not just visible ones.
An open window and a few buildings used as benchmarks gave me a rough idea of my effective range - just under 100 feet for anything fine, slightly under 500 for mid-sized objects like people or cars, and a bit less than 2500 for large objects like buildings.
A fine metal grate told me that objects which weren’t solid didn’t actually stop my ESP, but they could break it up and reduce the fidelity of my perception - things behind the grate were significantly fainter to my ESP. As the grate came closer to me or farther from whatever was behind it, though, the obscured objects came into greater relief.
Rolling up my sleeves and tying my shirt up a little (and probably wrinkling the Anima-branded heart logo that adorned it) confirmed that whatever force my ESP worked on was either emanating from or being picked up me all of me, every bit of my skin. The clothes I wore, being permeable fabric, didn’t stop it completely, just as the grate did. And, just like the grate, they were very close to me, meaning that my senses weren’t affected much - but enough that showing a bit more skin sharpened them.
After testing the ESP, we moved on to the telekinesis. The doctor seemed very curious about the fact that it affected me as well as my target. “It suggests that it’s anchored to you in some way, in a way that no other telekinetic I’ve ever heard of is,” she told me. “Even those who can affect their own body are physically lifting themselves, rather than pushing off of something else.”
It wasn’t hard to confirm for her that the TK was blocked by the same things that blocked the ESP. What was more interesting to me was that it seemed to be weakened in the same ways as well.
She had me exert a constant force on a scale, then moved the grate around in between me and the scale. She had me physically step closer to or farther away from it, as well, and from this concluded that the force was weakening in similar fashion, and at the same rate, as the ESP.
She had me lifting weights, to try and find the limit of my telekinetic force. After we had found my limits outside of the suit, she said, we would try with it on - Simone had apparently dropped the PA4 off and left again, not having time to stay and chat today. I warned her that my limit had seemed to be above what my body could handle in backlash, and she promised to keep an eye on it.
I was embarrassingly weak, as it turned out. I could comfortably exert only about 100 pounds of force (translating into pounds from, what else, newtons) before my knees started to give out. After a suggestion from Dr. Anomnachi, I tried pushing against the ground as well, to transfer the force through me - this helped, bringing my telekinetic strength up to 500 pounds (and a feeling like I was being squished), which was a little more useful, at least. 100 pounds of force wouldn’t do much for a superhero, however useful it could be in everyday life.
Changing into the PA4 definitely helped - by a whole order of magnitude. I was comfortably lifting 1000 pounds, 5000 while bracing myself. A quick check through the window confirmed that the expansion of my presence had gotten a similar enhancement - I was sensing at 1000 feet, one mile, and five miles.
There were no real surprises, and in the end I was classified just as I had expected to be - Self Buff 1 (Sensory) and Area Control 2 (Telekinetic*). Even if it wasn’t quite accurate, Dr. Anomnachi explained, it was better to give the rough idea and leave the details in the footnote, for these ratings.
“I think,” she said, looking over my results after I had changed back into normal clothes, “that your ESP and TK are actually just aspects of the same power.”
“Because what I can feel with one, I can impact with the other?”
“I think it’s the opposite, actually. You’re getting feedback from the TK.”
I thought about that. “Like... what, like I have lots of tiny invisible arms holding onto things?”
“More like... well, like you’re radiating yourself,” she said.
“What do you mean?”
“I’m not a magical specialist,” she cautioned, “but I know a little. And it seems a bit like you’re emitting some sort of magical energy which is, in some way, yourself. Your soul, perhaps, or maybe your mind, in a psychic sense. What it touches becomes part of you, for some purposes. You’re feeling with your proprioception because that’s the sense that tells you where parts of your own body are.”
“Hmm... that would explain why I get telekinetic backlash,” I tentatively agreed. “It’s just like pushing against a wall with my own arm.”
“Exactly.” She tapped her chin thoughtfully. “A better name than ESP and telekinesis, since your powerset doesn’t quite seem to fit the standard forms of those, might be... presence. You radiate your presence, you can exert a force of presence, and where you’re present, you’re aware.”
“More poetic, certainly,” I commented. “Which I like. Instead of ESP, it’s... what, the sense of my presence? And a force of personality?”
She smiled. “Yes, I like that. A force of personality, and a sense of your presence. Your presence fills a room.”
“Like a bad smell.”
She laughed. “Alright, enough poetry and useless theorizing,” she said, tapping her clipboard. “I’m not here to figure out the mechanics behind your power, as much as I’d like to - I have another appointment to get to in...” She glanced at her watch and sighed. “Five minutes ago.” The doctor gave me a nod. “Pleasure meeting you, Mx. Kaufman.
“You’re done for today, Miss Kaufman,” Starling said, standing from the bench where I had nearly forgotten he was, and I glowered at him for what had to have been a deliberate misgendering. “Don’t forget your meeting with PR tomorrow morning, but for now you can go.” He strode out of the room, still engrossed in the designs on his tablet.
Right... PR tomorrow for costuming and presentation. But the day after that...
Paintball.