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Authors: Paul Bristow

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BOOK: The Superpower Project
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“Cam?” said Megan, knowing something was badly wrong, but not yet sure what.

And then water blasted into the tunnel from the river above.

Chapter 39.
Look and Learn

The Tin Jimmy moved carefully: quick then slow, always along back roads and in shadows, or under the ground in forgotten sewers and aqueducts.

Mr Finn followed at a discreet distance, just in case it was a trap. “Secure the fifth sigil,” he repeated to himself under his breath, over and over again.

He felt confident. There were Waterworx security guards in the old Gaelic church waiting to capture the robot. Once the fifth sigil was properly under their control, getting the others would just be a matter of time. And Mr Finn was a patient man.

The Gaelic church was just ahead, as abandoned as all the old buildings in this horrible little town. It was being used by Waterworx as an ‘art workshop' to restore and repair the Phoenix sculpture, since Mr Finn's house was getting pretty full.

The robot entered the church. Mr Finn gave it a few moments, then casually wandered in behind it.

Inside, the Tin Jimmy lay on the floor, twitching and sparking under the electric net that had just been dropped on top of it.

“Tin Jimmy! Oh I've been wanting to meet you for ages,” said Mr Finn. “I would have arranged a chat sooner, but you haven't been taking my calls.”

“There are five,” said the robot.

“So I gather,” said Mr Finn, “though possibly not quite that many now…”

The Tin Jimmy's light bulb eyes flickered. “What do you mean?”

“Your friends, the superhero guardians? I'm afraid I've had to stop them causing trouble. Permanently.”

The robot's eyes now flashed angrily. “Impossible. You do not know where they are.”

“Of course we do. They are at the Sugar Sheds getting the last sigil,” said Mr Finn. “When I worked out that all the sigils had been hidden in old buildings, I put the oldest buildings in town under surveillance. It's not hard when your company's main job is knocking down old ruins to build new office blocks.”

“What have you done to them?” asked the robot, struggling to move under the net.

Mr Finn looked at his watch. “Well, it was a stroke of luck that last sigil being at the docks right by Destiny. And Resilience, Evolve and Chronos are on their way there too. Just to be sure. It's a shame it has to end like that. If no one had got in our way, we could have found the sigil coins without anyone getting hurt. So actually, if you think about it, it's their own fault.”

The Tin Jimmy shuddered angrily. “You are mistaken.”

“I suspect you were supposed to be a diversion today,” said Mr Finn, “but actually, it turns out we need you
more
than all the other sigils anyway.”

The robot blinked silently, the net sparking and fizzing against his metal body. “What do you need me for?”

“Well,
Jimmy
,” said Mr Finn, “don't you know? You yourself are the key that all the other sigils need to work. Finally I can finish the job my father started, with or without your cooperation. You see, technically, we don't need all of you, just your hand.” He gestured to a large workbench where there was a circular saw.

***

If Mr Finn had been listening properly, he might have heard a small gasp from one of the darker corners of the church. Kevin had heard enough. He had been watching and following Mr Finn since he saw the Phoenix sculpture come to life. Kevin didn't understand everything he'd heard, but he knew it wasn't good. Nice people didn't threaten to cut up friendly robots who hung out with Cam and Megan.

Somehow, he was going to have to help without Mr Finn seeing him.

So it was really lucky that Kevin could turn invisible.

Chapter 40.
Bumps and Bruises

Cam had transformed the moment he heard the first splash. It was the only way he could be sure to get Megan out.

It didn't seem like so very long ago that he had dived into the dam and could only turn into an otter. This time he knew exactly what the situation needed: fast, powerful, dangerous, shark-Cam torpedoed under the fast-rising water and found Megan. She was a little surprised, but Cam decided to take that as a compliment.

Megan grabbed a fin and braced herself for what she knew was coming. They could see the hole that had been smashed in the tunnel above, allowing the water to pour in. It wasn't big enough for them both to fit through. So, together they charged back towards the closed steel hatch, which was now totally submerged. If they were going fast enough, and if the water pressure was on their side, they might be able to smash it open. If not, they were very likely to get splattered. Either way, it would be quick.

Cam swam up the staircase they had walked down less than half an hour ago and pummelled into the hatch. It gave way with a rusty shriek. Megan let go of his fin and tried to find her balance, but she was dizzy and her soaking wet clothes were heavy. Cam lay gasping in a puddle, changing back so he could breathe.

It had all been so scary and sudden that it took Megan a few moments to look up and realise that they were still in trouble. Polar bear-John was desperately trying to fight off the combined strength of Resilience and Evolve.

“Cam!” shouted Megan. “Gorilla!”

Without even turning around or getting up out of the puddle, Cam changed. Within seconds he had jumped on top of the freshly repaired Resilience. Megan flew at the beaming madness of Evolve to try and distract it from John, who she now saw was hurt. One of his front paws hung limply by his side, and his white fur was streaked with red. Evolve had clearly not fared much better – many of the sculpture's internal spokes were badly bent or snapped entirely. It would not take much, or at least that's what Megan hoped as she spiralled up into the shed's rafters.

Evolve followed, clambering up the scaffolding on the back wall. Megan waited until it was almost at the top, then swooped towards it. Evolve lunged at her, grabbing uselessly at the space where she had been. Now off balance, the sculpture teetered and wobbled; it took only a swift kick from Megan, now sweeping in from behind, to topple it entirely.

With a crunch, Evolve smashed into the dusty cobblestone floor and was still.

Megan could see that Cam was holding his own against Resilience, so she flew to John, who had changed back to his human form and was slumped against one of the steel posts that supported the building.

“John, we need to get you away from here. Can you walk?”

John shook his head. “I'm not going anywhere; we're not done here.”

Megan could see he was holding his side with his one good arm. “Are you ok?”

“Did you get the sigil?” he replied, ignoring her question.

“Yes… and we figured out where the last one is. It's TJ; he's not guarding it, it's
him
. You are five. That's what the Morse-code message meant.”

There was another crash and a brief shower of brick dust as gorilla-Cam swung Resilience around and bashed him into a wall. Resilience, at last, stopped moving.

“Hah. I suppose TJ forgot that too,” winced John. “Sarah must've expected him to tell us. She always did have a bit too much faith in that machine. Well, you'd better go get him then. Cam and I have got this covered.” John winked unconvincingly.

Megan sighed, knowing John was worse off than he was letting on. “Three guardians isn't enough. There should be five of us.”

“It's ok, Megan,” said Cam breathlessly, once again human. “You've got all the other sigils. We can finish this now if you go get him.”

Megan looked at her best friend, exhausted, wheezing and pale, then at John, broken and bleeding. Resilience and Evolve lay smashed and shuddering in the dust. She knew she had to take this chance.

“I'll be quick,” she said, “promise.”

As Megan shot out of the warehouse doors and up into the blue, John smiled at Cam. “I hope you've had a big breakfast,” he said, “because we're not done yet.”

Behind Cam, at the dockside, Destiny hauled itself out of the river, having failed to get rid of them by flooding the tunnel. Hundreds of metal scales tore into the resurfaced concrete walkway as it snaked over to them.

At the other end of the sheds, an alarm bell signalled the arrival of Chronos.

“Oh,” said Cam, “excellent.”

Chapter 41.
Friends and Foes

Megan had never flown so quickly, driven by fear for her friends back at the dock, and for what she was about to find. Something felt wrong. She had gone to the tunnels first, where TJ was supposed to lead Mr Finn, but there was nobody around. The Gaelic church was straight ahead now, and she hoped to find TJ standing outside with a captured Mr Finn. “Some Finn bothering you?” she had planned to say.

But nobody was waiting outside the church. Now, certain something bad had happened, she flew straight through one of the many smashed windows – and stopped in mid air. TJ lay on the ground beneath a wire net. Megan was so shocked by the sight of the crackling net over her helpless robot, she didn't notice the Waterworx guards standing just below her.

“Megan,” said TJ, trying to struggle free of the net. But it was too late, the security guards had grabbed her feet. There were too many of them holding on for her to fly away. Mr Finn stepped out from the shadows.

“Hello Megan,” he said. “Best tie her to something very heavy.”

“What have you done to TJ?”

“Nothing to worry about. I certainly don't want to damage the fifth sigil.”

Megan's face fell. How could
he
have known when they hadn't?

“Now Megan,” said Mr Finn, “I'm guessing that you have the sigil coins I need. Once you've given me those, Tin Jimmy and I will take a trip under the river to unlock the shield Watt created. And I'll claim my superpowered reward.”

Megan was barely listening; she was watching TJ twitch and shudder under the net. “You're going to break him! Take it off. Please, I'll give you the sigils! Don't hurt him.”

Mr Finn gestured to his security guards. “Take off the net. He's under my control now anyway.”

Megan watched as TJ was released. He stood slowly up, head and limbs still jerking slightly from the current. Mr Finn flipped open the panel at the back of the robot's head.

“Leave him alone!”

“I was quite impressed at your handiwork,” said Mr Finn, looking inside. “You completely bypassed the command chip my father installed.”

“TJ was never his to control.”

“Oh really?” Mr Finn held up the severed Goozberri Five cable. “See for yourself.”

TJ's eyes flashed green and red in response to Mr Finn's voice.

“Now, where are the sigils, Jimmy?” asked Mr Finn. “Do you have them or are they hidden down some other rabbit hole in this miserable little town?”

“They are in Megan's pocket,” said TJ.

“Could you fetch them for me please Jimmy?”

TJ walked to where Megan was tied. She squirmed away from him. “TJ, don't do this. You're a guardian, remember? This isn't you.”

“He's not a guardian,” laughed Mr Finn, “he's a robot.
I'm
the guardian. Inventing has always run in the family, y'see. From me and my beautiful killer sculptures all the way back to James Watt and his… steam-powered tin man. Haven't you guessed, Megan? I'm Watt's great-great-great-great-grandson. And I'm sure we can all agree I am pretty great.” Mr Finn knew that gag would have gone down a storm with a better audience.

“So you see, the robot, the sigils, the shield, the superhuman powers… it's really my birthright.”

“If you're a guardian, you must already have superpowers,” said Megan, still not wanting to believe it. “Why bother trying to unlock Watt's shield?”

“I do,” said Mr Finn, tapping his head. “Super-intelligence. Just like Watt. And being a genius is all very well, but sometimes you want a little something more. Hurry up Tin Jimmy, time to go.”

Megan couldn't look at TJ as he reached into her pocket and removed the four coins. She was speechless.

TJ handed the sigils to Mr Finn, who smiled sarcas-tically at Megan. “Don't take it personally. He's just following his programming. He's on the same control network as all my robots now. Phoenix!”

In the corner of the room, Phoenix stood up and stomped towards them.

“On you get, TJ,” said Mr Finn. “You and I are off for a trip ‘doon the watter', as I believe they say round these parts.”

Megan watched helplessly as Mr Finn and TJ clambered onto the sculpture – until she felt a tugging at the ropes that tied her to some huge pipes.

“Shhh!” hissed a voice. “Stay still.”

Realising someone was helping her, Megan tried to distract Mr Finn. “TJ won't let you do it. I know he won't.”

Neither the robots nor Mr Finn noticed her moving as the giant bird began to launch itself off the ground. Megan threw herself towards Phoenix with all the force she could manage, but its massive wing struck her across the head, knocking her back to the ground.

BOOK: The Superpower Project
6.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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