《The Law of Averages》Chapter 18
Advertisement
Downtown Atlanta smelt like burnt toast and ash. The air was heavy with heat, an oppressive blanket that smothered Dan's senses. His clothes were drenched in sweat after mere seconds, and the feeble breeze did nothing to cool him. Dan stared down at his glistening hands in consternation.
"This is... real?" he murmured, clenching his hand into a fist. He felt the muscles tighten and strain, he felt his body protest against itself. Dan relaxed, and the pain resolved into a dull ache.
"It most certainly is not," Marcus spoke into his ear. Dan flinched backwards, spinning around in surprise. Charred buildings met his gaze, their burnt out husks still smoldering. Smoke billowed out of open windows, casting a shadow over the sky.
"Be calm. I am not there," Marcus soothed.
Dan paused his frantic searching. Of course Marcus wasn't here. This was Atlanta. Georgia. Earth. A villain had just destroyed a chunk of the city. Dan was here for search and rescue, to lend what aid that he could. He'd just left Abby's; he had seen the devastation and wanted to help.
Except... that wasn't quite right.
He glanced at his surroundings once more. Destroyed buildings loomed large over him, crumbling and broken. The surrounding streets were warped from the blast, leaving the ground unstable. Dan could see a pair of ATVs in the distance, dragging small trailers filled with supplies towards a hastily erected pavilion. Volunteers were to gather there, to be briefed on how they could assist the police and firefighters in the area. Beyond the tent, officials rushed about with clipboards, frantically making notations and shouting orders.
Dan could practically sense the controlled panic that filled the air. He could see the determined anger on the faces of the distant volunteers. He could hear the sounds of sirens in the distance. It felt real.
"I'm... not here?" Dan stated uncertainly.
"No," Mercury's disembodied voice remarked calmly.
Dan furrowed his brow, murky memories swimming to the front of his mind. "You said I wouldn't forget." He tried not to sound angry—he was a little bit too disoriented to be angry—but he couldn't keep the accusation out of his tone.
"You are entirely too accepting of other realities. I... did not expect that. You didn't fight the simulation at all." Mercury sounded as apologetic as Dan had ever heard him be.
"I suppose I am," Dan said slowly, "but this is far from the strangest thing that's happened to me."
"Yes. I expected you to immediately question your surroundings. I should have taken your previous experiences into account." Marcus admitted.
Dan closed his eyes and counted to ten. The world seemed to stabilize more with every second. His confusion faded, slowly replacing itself with purpose. He could lambaste the doctor later. Hallucination or not, there were people that needed help.
Dan took a deep breath and started walking towards the nearby emergency tents.
"So, this is your training exercise. What am I supposed to do?" he asked quietly.
"It seems like you have some ideas of your own," Marcus chuckled. "The scenario is this: You are licensed for disaster relief and have arrived to assist in the aftermath of the Atlanta attacks. You'll find a card in your wallet with your credentials. Speak to any of the official looking fellows with clipboards and they'll get you sorted."
Advertisement
"I'm not licensed for disaster relief," Dan argued, as he altered his path toward a woman matching the doctor's description. A small queue of people formed in front of her, and a crate of orange vests sat behind her.
"Quite right. This little exercise should perfectly illustrate why such things are necessary. Fear not, however, for I will walk you through it."
Dan grimaced as he stepped into line. His hand dipped into his pocket and withdrew his wallet. A few errant flicks, and Dan retrieved his crisis license. The amount of information listed on it was startlingly short. His name, gender, and age, a personalized serial number, and a garbled sequence of letters, symbols, and numbers next to his upgrade description.
"What does S-HP17* stand for?" Dan asked with bemusement.
"That is the shorthand notation for your upgrade. The poor woman in front of you has to memorize every single one of them available to the public. The star indicates a mutation, the specifics of which cannot be condensed into short-hand. The number is the upgrade version."
"There have been seventeen iterations of the Short-hop?" Dan clarified quietly.
"Mm, yes. Not much interest in it after the first dozen or so failures. Unlimited, unrestricted teleportation is the Holy Grail of transportation, but the Short-hop lacked potential."
Dan swallowed heavily and remained silent. The line moved quickly, and soon he was facing the overworked woman at the front.
"Credentials," she demanded impatiently, holding out her hand.
Dan passed over his crisis license and his non-driver ID card. The woman glanced over both with alarming alacrity, pausing very briefly at the Dan's upgrade description. Her eyes flicked to him.
"Mutate?" she asked.
Dan nodded meekly.
She scowled. "Well?"
Dan glanced between her and the volunteers behind him. More scowls appeared, much to his confusion.
"She needs you to describe your power, Daniel," Mercury informed Dan with not at all hidden exasperation.
"Oh." Dan said aloud. His eyes widened as the woman's scowl deepened.
"Oh! Right, my Short-hop range is increased to about five miles, and doesn't require line of sight. I also haven't found a limit on the number of times I can jump," he babbled quickly. Even in this false world, he would rather keep his power a secret.
He thought for a moment, then added, "I can move up to my weight in non-living materials."
The woman's scowl faded minutely. She visibly pondered the specifics of his power, then turned to the crate behind her.
"You're on call for medical," she told him frankly, digging a bright orange vest out from the box and passing it over.
"What? I don't know anything about medicine—" Dan tried to interject, but a handheld transceiver radio was shoved into his face.
"Take this, pick up a map by the rear, and head towards the hospital tent," the woman told him in a voice that brooked no argument.
Why was he arguing with a simulation? Clearly Mercury was railroading him somewhere, the surly bastard.
"Yes ma'am," he replied, accepting the vest and radio. He turned to leave.
Advertisement
"Green as grass," he heard the woman mutter furiously behind him.
Dan moved stoically forward, struggling not to flush. It was just a simulation. There was nothing to get offended over. He shrugged on the vest, clipped the radio to his belt, and snagged a map as he left the pavilion. He could feel hostile glares on his back.
"A little much, don't you think?" he said into the air. Programming the simulation to be needlessly antagonistic was just petty. Marcus likely saw it as some sort of insane test, or maybe he was simply trying to discourage Dan.
"Every second you waste costs lives in this situation," Mercury snapped. "Do not be confused or offended when people dislike you for wasting their time. Efficiency is the only thing that matters."
Dan's stride hitched. He reminded himself that this was just a simulation and no one would actually die. He told himself that he would've known what to do in the real world.
His little brain fart at the front of the line had taken thirty seconds. How long was thirty seconds, to someone in a burning building or buried beneath rubble?
Dan didn't want to think about it
He accelerated his pace, moving quickly towards the distant medical tents. They were large, bright white, and labeled with red caduceus symbols, proclaiming their purpose to all and sundry. There were very few ambulances within sight; the roads were simply too damaged to support them. Instead, massive trucks with oversized wheels were parked outside the tent. Dan could spot volunteers hauling patients in and out of the vehicles on stretchers. Dan paled as he caught sight of a bloody body.
"Yes, indeed, this is not a game. You realize this, but you don't comprehend it," Marcus whispered into his ear. "People are dying as we speak. They are burning to death. They are suffocating. They are calling for help."
"I know," Dan replied stiffly.
"Do you? Then why are you walking!?"
Dan flinched at the admonition, the reminder. He should've remembered, should've known. He couldn't afford to dally. He stared at the distant tents and blinked his eyes.
Dan appeared at the entrance of a medical tent. The smell from within hit him like a physical blow. The area stank of cooked flesh and antiseptic, all but overpowered the ash that suffused the air. He could see people inside, covered in bandages. There were bodies, beds, people, more than Dan had ever seen in one place. Doctors and nurses swarmed throughout the tent, and Dan finally realized the sheer size of it. What he had assumed was multiple tents was one single structure. Or, more accurately, multiple structures linked together from within. Though the ceiling was less than ten feet tall, the conglomeration sprawled outwards for almost half the block.
A nearby nurse took in Dan's sudden appearance with nary a flinch. She glanced at his vest, down to his radio, then up to his face.
She smiled grimly. "Here to help?"
Dan snapped to attention, furiously stamping down on his budding fear. "Yes ma'am. I'm a teleporter. I can transport goods up to my weight with almost no limits on distance or repetition. They told me to come here."
She nodded at his explanation. "You'll be acting as an emergency resupply then. Set your radio to channel four."
Dan unclipped his radio and fumbled for the dial. As he did so, the nurse stepped past him and moved to a nearby desk. She scooped up some scattered papers and quickly leafed through them. By the time Dan had completed his task, she had scribbled down several notes and produced a radio of her own.
"Control, this is Stephanie zero-zero-three. I've got a teleporter with me, here for emergency resupply. Put him on call, would you please? His radio is,"—The nurse absently snatched away Dan's radio and scrutinized the bottom label—"serial number: six seven niner zero one."
She passed the radio back to Dan, and listened intently to her own device as a voice crackled back a reply. "Copy that Steff. Putting him down as Bravo-one-seven. Make sure he's on channel four. He goes active in five minutes. Good luck."
The voice clicked off. Stephanie gave Dan a stern look. "You get all that?"
"Um. I hope so?" Dan offered with a weak smile.
The nurse did not smile back.
"Repeat it back to me," she insisted.
Dan smoothed his expression and his anxiety. "I'm Bravo-one-seven. I'm on channel four. They'll... direct me once I'm called, presumably?"
The nurse sighed. "Your map is separated into grids. Go where they tell you to go. Bring what they tell you to bring. You'll find the resupply over there," Stephanie pointed to a far corner. Rows and rows of shelves and plastic containers occupied the space. Each shelf was labeled with a letter, large enough for Dan to see from over fifty feet away. The items on the shelves were also labeled, though Dan couldn't quite make them out.
"For emergencies, you'll get a label and a quantity. For basic resupply, we have kits on the outside of the tent that you can bring. Any questions?" Stephanie's voice was terse and rushed.
Dan couldn't blame her.
He shook his head in the negative and she bustled off to do her job. Dan could figure things out from here.
He took a moment to look around the tent. Doctors moved from place to place with purpose. Injured men and women moaned and shook and wept on their beds. Nurses wrapped wounds in thick layers of gauze, muttering soothing words to their patients.
They seemed alive. Real. All of them.
Dan wiped sweat off his brow. He breathed in the dank air.
Simulation or not, he didn't want to let these people down.
Whatever came next, he'd get through it. He'd learn fast.
He would have to.
Advertisement
- In Serial35 Chapters
Change My Heart, Change My World, Change Me
Portgas D Ace is dead in the Marinford, or also known as the war of best, saving his little brother with a smile on his face. Even after years passed some people are still hurting for his death. Still wishing that he was surviving and continuing his journey in life. Some of them are young, some old. Some are criminals, some are civilians and.... Some are gods. One of the gods is a god from Ethereas Dimension, where his people are magical but mostly illogical. He stumbled upon Ace's adventure by mistake, and took a liking to him. It pains him that he can't save Ace, when Ace needed him the most. So, when a ripple happened in his dimension, he takes the chance. As one of his children is asking for a second chance, he grants it while used the ripples to take Ace soul, and let it to be born again in his realm. Hopefully this time, in his realm here, Ace's adventure will last long and long....
8 178 - In Serial67 Chapters
I Win to be Heard (litRPG)
Born mute, Saya is sheltered and trained to become a [mage], but she doesn't want to follow that path and chooses to forge her own, certain she will achieve what she wants. "No matter what blocks my path, I will win." In her ambitions, she is caught in matters far beyond the scope of her life, slowly learning more about the grim imbalance that threatens the world's order, and the government of gods' true motives. Is Saya really trailblazing, or is she being manipulated by the shackles of fate?
8 159 - In Serial11 Chapters
Breathing Hurts: Short Stories
A collection of short stories written by different authors, in different styles.
8 62 - In Serial74 Chapters
The Games That Bind Us
John The Gamer, and I don't mean the type of gamer that plays games all day not even going to school, the games he plays are different but he at least try to keep up a normal front, Until the get an invitation to a school to make powerful people invincible to protect peons from the unknown 'MIST'this is a world with magic and beasts and if you know any fantasy story you should know how this sort of thing works, everyone is born with magic and also ability's only they can use. and this story takes place as John turns 16.
8 223 - In Serial30 Chapters
Picture Day (Inanimate Insanity AU)
[Picture Day Book 2 is up! Book 2: Lockdown]Moving schools can be hard, Fan would know.He recently moved schools mid-year and found it a little hard to fit in a first, but he made some good friends along the way.But when picture day arrives suddenly, Fan starts to realize this school may not be what it seems, something is being planned and Fan has yet to find out what it is.Unexpected things are in store for Fan and his newly-found friends, they will all just have to wait and see....(WARNING: Some Gore and blood.)(Characters by AnimationEpic on youtube)(This is my first story ive ever written in Wattpad so please dont judge, im not very experienced. The story may be a little uneventful at the beginning but im trying to make it more interesting as I go along!)[COMPLETE STORY]
8 158 - In Serial15 Chapters
Eureka
⥏ Scream - Billy Loomis X Reader X Stu Macher ⥑ (Y/n) is a hardworking 17 year old girl. She manages to stay at the top of her class and works the night-shift at the video store down the road from her home to help take care of herself and sister. Her teachers adore her determination and high grades, as well as her overall wholesome view on life. Classmates admire her ability to light up a room and make any conversation just a little bit better. However, nobody seems to notice how she doesn't have any close friends- nor realize that very few really know anything about her. Well, nobody, expect for two problematic boys who really enjoy people watching. ⚌⚍⚎⚏⚌⚍⚎⚏⚏⚎⚍⚌⚏⚎⚍⚌Highest Rankings:#1 in Scream#2 in horror#15 in Wattys#2 in Slashers#1 in BillyLoomis#1 in StuMacherThis book will have a polyamorous relationship! Not two dudes fighting over a snacc- if that's what you wanted I'm sorry! I'm here for that good poly shit.Also, as a slasher fic, it's probably going to have blood and gore, mentions of murder- you know, all that jazz.***Ghostface art on cover is by wrennnch on tumblr!!! Please check them out, they are so talented!***
8 186

