“Nifty,” Wayne said. “Got a plan?”
“You hold the tunnel. I’ll go back to that overlook and toss some Allomantic grenades to catch groups of enemies, then cover you as you move in. Once you’re out of the line of fire, I’ll follow.”
“Good as done!” Wayne said, and they split, him heading toward the two people she’ddropped. There he picked up one of their handguns and fired it a bunch of times into the main chamber—not to hit, but to make those beyond take cover. His hand wobbled a little, and he tossed the weapon aside as soon as it was empty, but it was excellent progress. Not that he needed to bemoredeadly, she supposed.
She left him, rounding to the overlook, which made a decent sniper spot. She picked out several groups of gangsters behind nearby boxes, watching as Wayne fired a second gun.
Marasi carefully took a small metal box from the pouch on her belt. All her life she had suffered disappointment and even dismissal because of her useless Allomantic talent. She could slow time around herself, which was… well, not much use. It essentially froze her to the perspective of everyone around her—removing her from a fight, giving the advantage to her enemies.
She’dfound occasional uses for it, but mostly she’dinternalized the presumed truth that her abilities were weak.
Then she’dmet Allik.
His people revered all Metalborn, Allomancers and Feruchemists alike. Though he’dbeen in awe of Wax and his flashy powers, Allik had been equally impressed withherabilities. She had one of the most useful Allomantic skills, he claimed. That had been difficult to accept, but the upshot was that if you had access to a little specialized technology, you could turn the world on its head.
Perhaps an inch and a half across, the Allomantic grenade hummedas she burned cadmium—and it absorbed her energy. She wasn’t swallowed by a bubble of slowness; with these new designs, all the power went into the box. She’dcharged it earlier, but that had been hours ago and she wanted to top it off.
Then, judging the distance carefully, she tossed it toward a group of enemies who had gathered behind some boxes for cover. Her months of practice paid off; she managed to land the device right in the center of the gangsters, who—focused on Wayne—barely noticed it rolling among them.
The grenade used ettmetal, which was tightly regulated by the Malwish, so she didn’t blame the gangsters for not knowing what to do; even among the Malwish these were rare. If the men had heard of the devices—and they might have, since the Set was known to employ them—they had likely never seen one.
A second later, a bubble of slowed time popped up around the device, trapping about ten of the men and women. She quickly topped off, then threw, the second of her three grenades—this one aimed at a group of enemies farther along. Her aim was true, and she ensnared another eight.
Calls of “Metalborn!” echoed through the cavern as the rest of the gangsters noticed that over half their number were frozen. Those would move in turgid slow motion as they tried to escape the bubble—but the ten-minute charge on the grenade would run out before they managed it.
She unslung her rifle and laid down covering fire—even picking off two of those remaining—as Wayne slipped into the main chamber. He moved in a blur of speed for a moment, then popped out of his speed bubble and leaped over a cleft in the rock. It took a bit between uses for him to recover his talents and put up another bubble, but she swore that time was shrinking.
He avoided the trapped people; she and he would deal with them later. For now he took advantage of the confusion to get in close to a couple of enemies. They noticed him, but he became a blur again—then came in from above, dueling canes held high.
Their shouts of pain distracted the others, which let Marasi pick off two more. Then she dashed back around to the main tunnel. Here she glanced into the warehouse cavern, then ran in a low crouch—careful to avoid the faintly shimmering perimeter bubbles of the grenades. She knew all too well how it felt to be surrounded by that molasses air while everything around you moved like lightning.
Marasi found her own cover near some packing equipment, and as the remaining gangsters reoriented, gunfire began pounding the stone and metal around her. As a girl, she’dread all about Wax’s exploits in the Roughs—and the more she practiced her trade, the more inaccuracies she spotted. Sure, the stories mentioned gunfire. But they usually left out howloudit was when bullets struck. With them pelting the equipment around her, it sounded like she’dgiven little Max a set of drumsticks and let him loose in a kitchenware shop.
A second later the sounds slowed—like a phonograph playing at a fraction of normal power. The air shimmered near her, and Wayne slumped up against the equipment, a grin on his face—and a bloody wound on his shoulder.
“Sloppy,” she said, nodding to the wound.
“Hey now,” he said. “Any fellow can accidentally get shot now and then. ’Specially if he’s runnin’ around with a pair of sticks in a room with lotsa guns.”
“How much bendalloy do you have left?”
“Plenty.”
“You sure?”
“Yup.”
“Wayne, I’m proud of you,” she said. “You’re actually saving it, being frugal like I asked.”
He shrugged like it was nothing, but shewaslegitimately proud of him. He received an allotment from the department, and during the early days of their partnership he’dalways run out on missions. She’dbeen planning to talk to Captain Reddi about increasing the allotment, until she’ddiscovered that Wayne used his bendalloy for allkindsof non-combat, non-detective work. Playing pranks, changing costumes to delight children, the occasional casual thievery…
It was good to see him doing better.
“How many idiots left?” he asked.
“Eleven,” she said.
“That’s higher than I can count.”